Lily Frost


Canadian singer Lily Frost – I’d never heard of her, but this sultry soulful singer released six albums already. And she sings (partly) in French! FS-reader Martin wrote a guestpost:

Lily Frost (Lindsey Davis) is a Toronto-based songwriter and vocalist. With her soulful voice she can whisper seductively, but also keep afloat on top of a booming arrangement. After two albums with ’60s inspired popsongs she started working with José Miguel Contreras (also her husband), releasing four more cds. Contreras has his own band, By Devine Right, best known for ex-bandmember Feist. On Frosts 2008 album “Lily Swings” (where she performed songs from the repertoire of Billie Holiday) she recorded with the late Ray Condo’s band The Swinging Dukes.
In 2009 she received a Gemini nomination for the score, which she co-wrote, for the Canadian hit TV show “Being Erica.” Lily also co-wrote the theme song “All I Ever Wanted to Be.” 2009 also saw Lily expand her fan-base in France, embarking with a four-piece band on two sold-out tours in a year, drawing praise from French critics for her “mastery of ambiance,” her “wide palette of emotion,” and the powerful singing voice and strong personality of a woman who clearly “knows where she’s going.”
For “Veridian Torch”, her sixth solo disc, Lily has tapped into the wilderness of Canada, of ancient trees, terrifying electric storms, irritating insects, and romance with the land, as expressed in French poetry. Lily and her family moved from downtown Toronto last year, to a forest outside the city. But the songs were all written and recorded before that. It was a case of life imitating art: “The songs magically drew us back to nature,” she says. The two French songs “Chalet du Bois” (with some help by Marianne Dissard with the lyrics) and “Verlaine” are deeply felt and very poetic. Anyway – my favourite song is “Thompson Pines” with the most beautiful melody I heared last year.

Lily Frost – Thompson Pines
Lily Frost – Chalet du bois
(see the video)

Comme un boomerang

In other news: a new compilation featuring inédits by Serge Gainsbourg will be released next month. A single, Serge singing Comme un Boomerang, is released today. He wrote the song for Dani‘s Eurovision Songcontest appearance in 1975, but it got rejected. She recorded it with Daho in 2001. Read all about it HERE. (Thx Bruno!)

See the tracklisting of the new box here. This is the official release of the Boomerang-demo by Serge. It was available on the interwebs earlier, here.

Serge Gainsbourg – Comme un boomerang
Dani & Daho – Comme un boomerang
Feist, Gonzales, Dani – Comme un boomerang
Etienne Daho – Comme un boomerang (live)

Les sucettes

Les sucettes, written in 1966 by Serge Gainsbourg for France Gall, is without a doubt the best song ever about a girl sucking on a anis-filled lollipop. You don’t need a dirty mind to get the sexual innuendo – though the underage France Gall had no clue. Nor did her minders. Or maybe they were in on the joke Gainsbourg pulled. France did not take it lightly, as this interview-clip shows (in short; she distrusted men ever since). Yesterday somebody asked me about Les sucettes covers. Were there any good ones? To be blunt; no. France’s version (and the duet-version with Serge in this video) was never topped. There are some pretty weird ones out there. I can’t decide which one is the most disturbing: this puppeteer-version, this (gay?) choir version or this Japanese rework (also posted below). This is from Japan as well, and again pretty outthere.
Below are a couple of versions I collected in the past years. I know there are more (a dull cover by Les Tres Bien Ensemble), but if you know of a really good one/odd one, please contact me!

France Gall – Les sucettes
Serge Gainsbourg – Les sucettes
Nezhnoe Eto – Les sucettes (Russian version)
FN Guns – Les sucettes (metal version)
Hanayo – Les sucettes (weird Japanese version)
Lio – Les sucettes (close-to-the-original version)
Jumpin’ Quails – Les sucettes (jumpstyle r&b version)
The Lovejoys – Les sucettes (loungepop version)
Hbsk – Les sucettes (electronic dreampop version)
Patrick Péronne – Les sucettes (cocktailjazz version)

Les Surveillantes

Country-folksters Les Surveillantes are from Winnipeg, Canada. I was introduced to their music via Sound Bites (who lists French-language albums by artists I’ve never heard of, which is nice). They released their first album last year.  This bio tells us more about the band, though I have to say the names mentioned don’t ring a bell. I really like Danielle’s strong voice (she doesn’t sing on all songs), I’d say she’s more soothing than sexy (think La Grande Sophie). Whilst singing a lullaby like Voyageuse, that’s fitting.

Les Surveillantes – Voyageuse

Les Bellas

Things are getting fuzzy here on FS. Fuzz-guitars, that is. Les Bellas hail from Perpignan, they released their debut last September. They have an interesting line-up: a female drummer (Marie), a female singer (Nadege, who also plays the trumpet) and Lionel (Marie’s brother) and Giom on the guitars. On their debut, they play two covers (by Wanda Jackson, and Gentlemen) but mostly sweet, buzzing songs of their own. Er, make that the past-tense, by the way. because Les Bellas aren’t around any more. They disintegrated when a record deal fell through, or something. Read about that here.
Shame, ’cause a song like Belladelic is great. Then again, members of Les Bellas now form The Liminanas, who released their debut in October. And they’re still around. And sing more songs in French. So there.

Les Bellas – Belladelic
The Liminanas – Je suis une gogo girl

2011: A New Hope

While we are waiting for the new Daphné-album, the new Keren Ann cd, the new Marina Celeste album, the official release of Marianne Dissard’s album (that you can buy straight from the source as well) probably new music by Coeur de Pirate and hopefully new stuff by Valerie Leulliot, Rose, Carmen Maria Vega, Carine Erseng and Camille, we’re entering the new year with some new names. Minimal is a Vive La Fête-styled duo that make electropop like a four-year-old makes a drawing: messy but fun. They do two covers, of AC/DC and Pizzicatto Five, but I’m posting their bubbly Surmoi. Download their album for free HERE.
Emilie Proulx we know, the Quebecoise singer-songwriter likes to take it s-l-o-w. Dream folk, she likes to call her music, I’d throw in fellow countrymen Cowboy Junkies as a reference. Together with Genevieve Toupin she made a live EP that’s up for grabs for HERE, just name your price. I really dig the sultry closing track. Attention: the downloadlink could end up in your junkmail box.
Music-wise, Julien H. Andreani is a bit too poppy for me. But you might want to give his tracks a try, you can download some for free. HERE.
Not free, but noteworthy nonetheless is the debut-album by Margaux Simone. She’s an artist on the crowdfunding My Major Company (also home of Gregoire, Joyce Jonathan and Marie-Amélie). Margaux is from Marseile, her dad worked with rapper IAM and fellow wordsmith Akhénathon is a friend, which explains his role on the album. Sheryl Crow, Zazie and La Grande Sophie are mentioned as references, I’d say she’s a more folky Emma Daumas. Pleasant voice, talented, but her album misses one or two killer tracks. Still, one to watch.

Margaux Simone photo by Bernard Benant, take from here.

Emilie Proulx – Si tu penses à moi
Minimal – Surmoi
Margaux Simone – Nana

L’Amour Est Bleu

In 1967, Vicky Leandros hit #4 at the Eurovision Song Contest with the bittersweet kitsch ballad L’amour est bleu, written by space age pop pioneer André Popp. While Vicky scored a modest hit, as well as Claudine Longet a few months later, it was French orchestra leader Paul Mauriat – kind of the Gallic pendant to American muzak lightster Ray Conniff – who made ten tons of bucks with the song, topping the US charts with his key party warm-up version for five consecutive weeks in spring 1968. The same year, covers by Hungarian jazz guitarist Gabor Szabo, reggae entrepreneur Jackie Mittoo, and awfully neglected actress/ singer Vivian Dandridge came out. Plus the stratocaster aberration by Jeff Beck – no. 14 in Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time. Say what?

Paul Mauriat – L’amour est bleu

Jackie Mittoo – Love is Blue

Gabor Szabo – Love is Blue

Vivian Dandridge – Love is Blue

Jeff Beck – Love is Blue