Pendentif

boomMafia Douce by French band Pendentif is the album I’ve been playing the most this summer. It’s released on September 24, which seems an odd date for a summer fresh album that this is, but then agan it is also excellent material for reminiscing about great summer days. Recent and from the past. Pendentif hail from Bordeaux, they were featured here before. ‘American beaches and chilly English winds’ are their main influences. So are Lio, Pavement and films by Jacques Rozier. The combination of Cindy Callède’s husky voice and the clear guitaristic needlework is highly charming. Jerricane (see video) is one of my favourite tracks, oh la la la.

Pendentif – Jerricane

La Grande Sophie, fabulous at 44

Guestposter Mark, who met LGS when she sang in London in May, remains stunned by her:

La+Grande+Sophie+413La Grande Sophie has nearly completed her magnificent ‘Place du Fantôme’ tour of 125 venues which she began in February 2012. Just two more to come: Vence on 19 July and Erbalunga, Corsica on 9 August. In all that time she has never cancelled a concert due to illness, weather or technical problems, and only once (outdoors at Brussels this summer) been held up by a serious power failure.

While the Rolling Stones performed to 100,000 people at Glastonbury, most saw them only in the distance or on a screen, LGS has reached 100,000 over 1½ years in small venues and at festivals big and small. And you can see her close-up, and meet her.

It seems right to mark LGS’s achievement on her 44th birthday. She was born on 18 July 1969, the year when Françoise Hardy, to whom for some of us she is a true successor, ceased live concerts at just 25. LGS by contrast loves live performance, which she has made an art form in itself and is having a ‘fabulous forties’.

We can now really see how LGS works her magic, in close-up at her ‘concert ultra privé’ in Paris in November last year.

Her highly skilled band is all here – Ludovic Bruni (bass guitar and double bass), Vincent Taurelle (keyboards), Phillippe Almosnino (lead guitar), and Emiliano Turi (drums). In 2013 Mathieu Denis has replaced Ludovic.

If you think La Grande Sophie makes high-class popular music look easy, remember that ‘20,000 hours of practice’ is what we are told takes an artiste to the top. And she has been writing and singing for over 20 years. No wonder that few can match her stage skills.

The 16-minute film includes ‘Sucrer les fraises’, ‘Du courage’, ‘Ne m’oublie pas’, and ‘Je ne changerai jamais’ and a ‘descente dans la salle’ at the end.

Françoise Hardy’s own appreciation of LGS came at last, a few months ago, in an unexpected contribution to LGS’s ‘Thé ou café’ appearance on France2 TV.

The full LGS interview on ‘Thé ou café’ on 27 April is here

1011715_165202883659645_1347259784_n Montreal June 2013 (4)For the latest LGS innovation, singing with the Orchestra of Radio-France at the Paris fête de la musique on 22 June, see ‘Sucrer les fraises’ here . She wrote on her facebook how much she enjoyed singing at the inaugural outdoor concert at this year’s Francofolies de Montréal and that she liked this photo (shown on the left) taken by her drummer. A career highlight perhaps, achieving a dream of performing to a huge crowd in a great North American city like her anglophone rock model Chrissie Hynde.
Sophie will soon be out of sight composing a new album. We can hope for even better to come.

Dubmood

Not sure if singer ‘Gem Tos’ is male or female (it’s an android, according to this press release) but he/she/it sure sounds sultry in this new electronic track by Swedish producer Dubmood

Alka Balbir

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Gorgeous actress slash singer Alka Balbir released a single, on which she (again) sounds a lot like Isabelle Adjani. Which of course is a good thing. There’s a long Lafayette remix of Batards Supreme available (Alka and L collaborated before) plus a slow burning, almost spoken word track with heavy 80s synths (her boyfriend is Gaspard Auge from Justice). Promising, all ‘n all.

Alka – Bâtards Suprême

10 French-Canadian Bands For Free

big_news512Go HERE to download a file with ten songs by French-Canadian bands, courtesy of CISM Radio, to celebrate the Francofolies festival. Le Couleur is an FS-fave, listen to La Bronze as well. (merci Natasha!)

Zaz

zaz_290687Arja, the lovely co-conspirator of Dutch music-nerd weblog Nummer van de Dag, wrote a piece on Zaz. This is a translation:

About a year ago I discovered Zaz, née Isabelle Geffroy. I played her versatile debut album so much, it became irritable and I had to disband her for a while. For otherwise I’d grow an aversion to French variété and gypsy-songs that would never be cured. Anyhoo, with Zaz’s new album Recto Verso in the shops and summer coming up, it sure is time for some uncut French pop.

The dog’s bollocks of Zaz’s style are her ballads. Sure, she can sing sunny songs like single On Ira or the upbeat Oublie Loulou (Charles Aznavour), but everyone has to be really quiet when the singer seems to start a slow song. ‘Cause Zaz and ballads go together like a horse and carriage. They don’t cause any dental damage because of sweetness – in my humble opinion that is. She chooses not to sing about fluffy lovey dovey stuff, but about the heartache, the despair. Her voice gets rough, the edge is showing. If you listen to a line of those ballads, you suddenly realise how comforting those songs are to you. Check out La Lessive for instance. Or Port Coton, from her debut.

The song Si Je Perds isn’t as tranquil als Port Coton, or as stripped down as Trop Sensible or Si. It’s as compelling as La Lessive, but I call it a ballad because of the melancholy way she’s singing and the sketchy arrangement. When Si Je Perds starts, you just have to listen. With full attention, so turn up the volume, close all windows and doors. Start off fresh. The guitar part makes you want to do this. Zaz’s most compelling talents, her raspy voice and narrative songs, are beautifully combined in this great ballad.
So, phew, tradition is upheld, I can carry on now. With finding out what the hell this song’s about, for instance.

Zaz – Si Je Perds

Perfect Paradis

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For curator-site Perfects.nl I compiled the ultimate Vanessa Paradis compilation. Deezer- and Spotify-only. Go HERE.

Hay Babies!

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Les Francouvertes is an annual Canadian music festival held in Montreal, which spotlights emerging francophone musical artists. Previous winners that regular readers are probably aware of include La Patère Rose, Chloé Lacasse and last year’s winners Les Soeurs Boulay.

The 2013 finals were held last month and the resounding winners were the New (or Neaveau) Brunswick trio of Julie Aubé, Katrine Noël and Vivianne Roy, better known as Les Hay Babies.

No mean feat for a band that only formed some 18 months ago, primarily because the girls were sick and tired of competing against one another in numerous regional battle of the bands contests. Realising that three heads are better than one, the girls got together and formed Les Hay Babies at the back end of 2011.

On the back of some solid gigging in both their native Canada and the more enlightened (i.e. francophone) regions of Europe, the band last summer released their debut bilingual 6-track EP through their bandcamp webpage.

The band define themselves as Indie-Folk and the EP is a mix of both French and English language songs, all showcase the girls’ tight harmonies, ably backed by their guitar and ukulele… and banjo plucking (it’s country-folk, after al).

The opener, the plaintive sung-in-English “Horse on Fire”, neatly dovetails into the rasping “Chu pas une femme à marier”, both of which are great folk ballads, separated – or more likely united – by the differing languages. In fact the band switch seamlessly between French and English, often mid-song. It’s nice to hear that the girls askew moderating the French-Canadian accent and pronunciation (although this can present a few challenges!)

There’s more than a hint of Chantal Archambault and last year’s Francouvertes winners (and blog favourites) Les Soeurs Boulay, especially on the plaintive “Obsédée” and whistful “Le bear song.”

The band remain truer to their country-folk roots than some of the compatriots, which may make this EP harder to warm to. Stick with it as it is well worth the effort and appreciate the girls’ vocal harmonisation and finally crafted and beautifully sympathetic songs.

Amongst the prizes, as winners of the Francouvertes, the girls win some quality recording time an distribution of the resulting album. Hopefully this should be available later this year or early 2014…

(Thanks for this guestpost, Steve!)