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Bad Reputation- Pierre de Gaillande Sings Georges Brassens (CD)

SKU: 723721470258
Regular price ¥97.00
Unit price
per
the album cover for Bad Reputation - Pierre de Gaillande Sings Georges Brassens
the album cover for Bad Reputation - Pierre de Gaillande Sings Georges Brassens

From the 1950's through the late 70's, the late George Brassens redefined French Chanson. He was an anarchist bard whose songs were sometimes raunchy, sometimes polemic, often poignant, and always steeped in the classic French poetry of Françcois Villon, Appolinaire and Aragon. George Brassens went on to become one the most emblematic French singer of the 20th century, setting a new standard for every French songwriter that came after him, including Serge Gainsbourg and of course, Jacques Brel, his peer and close friend. Unlike Brel or Gainsbourg however, his songs never became known outside of France, mostly because of the literary aspect of his lyrics. Franco-American singer and composer Pierre de Gaillande grew up in Paris and Southern California, listening, among other things, to his dad's extensive Brassens collection. Pierre went on to play in American indie bands - He moved to NY and played bass with the Morning Glories, played guitar with Vic Chestnut and toured Russia with his own band, Melomane. He has also worked as a film composer. In the past couple of years, Pierre also rediscovered his dad's record collection and developed a mild obsession with George Brassens. He has taken on the impossible task of translating Brassens' songs, to pretty astonishing results. He has stuck to the rhyming scheme and verse length of the original songs, thus matching the melodies perfectly. He has re-arranged the music with a cinematic sensibility, using a combination of guitars, clarinets, lapsteel and charango. What he has come up with sounds nothing like a translated work. He has managed the impossible - to translate not only the style, content and wit of the original, but he has also managed to somehow translate the musicality of the original recordings with completely different arrangements. The best way to describe the project would be to compare it to the perfect movie adaptation of a book classic. Think Stanley Kubrick or Raoul Ruiz. Along with the CD, a book of his translations will be published by Ugly Duckling Presse.

Tracklist:

  1. Princess and the Troubadour [La Princesse Et Le Croque-Notes], T
  2. To Die For Your Ideas [Mourir Pour Des Id‚es]
  3. Penelope [P‚n‚lope]
  4. Don Juan [Don Juan]
  5. Song For the Countryman [Chanson Pour I'auvergnat]
  6. Ninety-Five Percent [Quatre-Vingt-Quinze Pour Cent]
  7. I Made Myself Small [Je Me Suis Fait Tour Petit]
  8. Philistines [Les Philistins]
  9. Trumpets of Fortune and Fame [Les Trompettes De La Renomm‚e]
  10. Public Benches [Les Amoureux Des Bancs Publics]
  11. Absolutely Nothing [Rien A Jeter]
  12. Pornographer [Le Porngraphe], The
  13. Bad Reputation [La Mauvalse R‚putation]
Format: New CD/Rock

Bad Reputation- Pierre de Gaillande Sings Georges Brassens (CD)

SKU: 723721470258
Regular price ¥97.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 06.08.2010

 
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> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to FOUR copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

From the 1950's through the late 70's, the late George Brassens redefined French Chanson. He was an anarchist bard whose songs were sometimes raunchy, sometimes polemic, often poignant, and always steeped in the classic French poetry of Françcois Villon, Appolinaire and Aragon. George Brassens went on to become one the most emblematic French singer of the 20th century, setting a new standard for every French songwriter that came after him, including Serge Gainsbourg and of course, Jacques Brel, his peer and close friend. Unlike Brel or Gainsbourg however, his songs never became known outside of France, mostly because of the literary aspect of his lyrics. Franco-American singer and composer Pierre de Gaillande grew up in Paris and Southern California, listening, among other things, to his dad's extensive Brassens collection. Pierre went on to play in American indie bands - He moved to NY and played bass with the Morning Glories, played guitar with Vic Chestnut and toured Russia with his own band, Melomane. He has also worked as a film composer. In the past couple of years, Pierre also rediscovered his dad's record collection and developed a mild obsession with George Brassens. He has taken on the impossible task of translating Brassens' songs, to pretty astonishing results. He has stuck to the rhyming scheme and verse length of the original songs, thus matching the melodies perfectly. He has re-arranged the music with a cinematic sensibility, using a combination of guitars, clarinets, lapsteel and charango. What he has come up with sounds nothing like a translated work. He has managed the impossible - to translate not only the style, content and wit of the original, but he has also managed to somehow translate the musicality of the original recordings with completely different arrangements. The best way to describe the project would be to compare it to the perfect movie adaptation of a book classic. Think Stanley Kubrick or Raoul Ruiz. Along with the CD, a book of his translations will be published by Ugly Duckling Presse.

Tracklist:

  1. Princess and the Troubadour [La Princesse Et Le Croque-Notes], T
  2. To Die For Your Ideas [Mourir Pour Des Id‚es]
  3. Penelope [P‚n‚lope]
  4. Don Juan [Don Juan]
  5. Song For the Countryman [Chanson Pour I'auvergnat]
  6. Ninety-Five Percent [Quatre-Vingt-Quinze Pour Cent]
  7. I Made Myself Small [Je Me Suis Fait Tour Petit]
  8. Philistines [Les Philistins]
  9. Trumpets of Fortune and Fame [Les Trompettes De La Renomm‚e]
  10. Public Benches [Les Amoureux Des Bancs Publics]
  11. Absolutely Nothing [Rien A Jeter]
  12. Pornographer [Le Porngraphe], The
  13. Bad Reputation [La Mauvalse R‚putation]