La Plus Grande Fille

Guestpost! Mark takes on a linkfest with great performances by La Grande Sophie:
486906_4929571317240_711309430_n Olympia Paris Dec 2012
“La Grande Sophie est un spectacle à elle toute seule, tant sur le plan visuel que sur le plan vocal” Pub pour le festival Muzik’elles septembre 2012

La Grande Sophie is great in many ways, and not the least is that her concerts have the most dramatic start of any on the planet. Her band is in place in the dark, the sound and lighting build up, the first bars of ‘Ma Radio’ are heard, and suddenly there she is on the stage. Not Sophie la giraffe as she once laughingly called herself, or the Amazon which her self-given name suggests, but a perfect figure: a mane of dark hair, bare white arms and flashing eyes, in a short black dress and dark heeled boots. At 43, and 1m78 (‘5 pieds 10 pouces’ to Canadians; 6 ft in heels), she has a wonderful elegance.

In the summer of 2012, her dramatic festival appearances, 1½ hours, drew more and more people , and her concert list got longer and longer – it now runs to July 2013. By last November, at Mouscron (BE), Sophie’s show was 2 hours long, with 2 rappels, and this for an audience of 400. No other artiste has such a reach into the heart of both France and Belgium, in local theatres and halls. Her public sees her close-up, and experiences her now-celebrated ‘descente dans la salle’ while singing ‘Petite Princesse’.

What has happened to take Sophie Huriaux, former student of sculpture at the Collège des Beaux-Arts at Marseille, from rock, and aspiring to be the Chrissie Hynde of France until 2008, to the summit of French pop in 2012, winner of best album at the 2013 Victoires de la Musique ? She has described how she turned acoustic and changed her singing voice for her 2009 album ‘Des vagues et des ruisseaux’. ‘Quand le mois d’avril’ in this 2009 performance is just one example. In fact the change of public image was sudden – her appearance on MyTaratata in April 2009, with ‘Quelqu’un d’autre’. Since then she has not looked back. ‘La Place du Fantôme’ (2012) has built on this, and is a worthy winner of Les Victoires.

LGS is now a strong, versatile and yet sensitive performer. Her confidence means she starts her concerts with not one but two slow songs: ‘Ma Radio’ (whose lyrics are so clear that they hardly need translation), and then the ethereal, rarely-filmed ‘Tu fais ton âge’.

She holds back until the heart of her concerts her top track ‘Ne m’oublie pas’. This pop set-piece can be seen in a big-festival version at L’Hôtel de Ville, Paris, last summer; sung in the most fabulous dress on MyTaratata
in March 2012; stunningly performed in October with the musicians of Belle et Bum, Montreal; and with a string quartet in 2013.

‘Sucrer les fraises’, a song about old age, whose lyric she loves to discuss, has developed already, from the original acoustic on the album, into a striking new synthetised version (‘une version d’été’ LGS called it after first trialling it unannounced at Gourville (Charente) last June). See the video filmed at La Ciotat here, and LGS’s joy in its latest Paris performance.

And there is much more, including Barbara’s classic ‘Dis, quand reviendra-tu ?’ as a guitar solo – the leading 21st century interpretation of one of the 20th century’s greatest songs. And surprises, such as the France Gall hit ‘Laisse Tomber les Filles’ duetted with Ornette at La Cigale last month.

What makes LGS so good?

• Artistic talent – she studied sculpture – brilliant songwriting, fine arranging, a much improved voice
• Years of experience, giving her consistency, and ability to maintain a constant high standard of live performance through a tour of 120 concerts over 18 months
• Drawing on both Anglophone pop and the great French tradition of chanson
• Superbly crafted songs with strong instrumental sections, and she ends songs well
• Expert use of a very skilled four-piece band, and as good with just her own guitar
• Readiness to ‘remodel’ her older songs with new arrangements
• An attractive appearance on stage – she has talked about how important this is now
• An engaging personality, ready to give interviews and always positive
• An appeal to both sexes and a wide range of ages

LGS speaks, and sings in, good English but hardly needs to. For not the least of her qualities is that she speaks the most perfect French, as seen in interviews such as here and here.

One 40-something female fan sums her up here – “Belle, généreuse, et talentueuse – vive la quarantaine”. LGS is open about being “obsessed by the passage of time”; but likes to say that she has frozen it for herself: ‘J’ai arrêté le temps’. She gave up sculpture for music, because she wanted to succeed in ‘un art moins élitiste, plus populaire’. She has certainly achieved her aim.

For the world as seen by LGS and her fan base, visit www.facebook.com/LGSOfficiel

New Loane song

For the new movie by Michel Gondry. Awesome track:

Original version by France Gall:

Maria Goes to the Movies

mariamar1974’s Les Valseuses was a nice kick in the teeth of the bourgeoisie, a movie like they don’t make ’em anymore starring the young Gérard Depardieu, lovely Miou-Miou and of course the immortal Patrick Dewaere. The main theme of the beautiful soundtrack, written and performed by jazz violin legend Stéphane Grappelli, now comes to life again on Maria Markesini’s cinephile sound journey Cinema Passionata, also featuring a piece from Jacques Demy’s Demoiselles de Rochefort, and lots of other stuff from The Big Lebowsky to Amistad. Markesini, born on the Greek Island of Kefalonia and living in the Netherlands, is a chanteuse to watch. Her approach, oscillating between grand pop aria and Bobby McFerrin on crystal meth, doubtless has class, but also gets a bit tiring in the long run.

Maria Markesini – Rolls (Theme from Les Valseuses)

Les Soeurs Boulay

Guestpost! Steve on the new Les Soeurs Boulay album:

So my eagerly awaited event this month is the release of Les Soeurs Boulay’s debut album ‘Le poids des confettis’ (The weight of confetti). Regular readers may already know that since I discovered their eponymous EP, I have been deeply enamoured with the angelic crispness of the girls’ vocal harmonies… But would the album live up to my expectations? I’ve placed Gaspé’s Melanie and Stéphanie Boulay on such a high pedestal that if they were to slip they’d be surely shattered into a thousand pieces…
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One listen and any fears have long since been dispelled. The girls’ haunting melodies are still there to the fore, but there’s a new found certain assuredness which can be discerned not only in the reinterpretation of the songs off their earlier EP, but also those debuting on this album. There’s an added depth and warmth to the rhythmic melodies which as always complements the fresh clarity of the sisters’ vocal style – none more so than on “Un trou noir au bout d’un appât”

There’s more than a hint of early Simon and Garfunkel, especially the way their voices are almost telepathically intertwined (Check out there cover of “The Boxer” here), and on “Chanson de Route”, there’s the added benefit of highlighting that the girls sound as fresh (and yes, “fragile”) in English as they do French.

Ultimately this is an album chock full of songs about love, life, heartbreak. At times intimate and introverted (“Mappemonde”), others bold and extrovert (“Ôte-moi mon linge”), sometimes almost downright danceable – certainly in a toe-tapping kind of way (“Par Le Chignon de Cou”). All with faintest of country-folk tinges that makes you yearn for the ruggedness of the Atlantic coastline.

It’s March and already I have a pretty good idea as to my album of the year 2013. Check it out for yourselves as it can be streamed here – until the album’s official release.

Les Soeurs Boulay – Par le chignon de cou

Apollinaire’s Pink Hotel

midtsomThe folks at legendary East German youth radio station DT64 were the first to air songs by GDR blues rockers Keimzeit in 1980, though their first album – titled Irrenhaus (Loony Bin) was only released ten years later, when the Wall finally had vanished. Their new album Midtsommer under the moniker Keimzeit Akustik Quintett features two French lingo cover versions, Trenet’s La Mer and Pink Martini’s 1997 million seller Sympatique – though on PM’s album the credits go to band members China Forbes and Thomas Lauderdale, the lyrics were drawn from Guillaume Apollinaire’s poem Hôtel, already used by French composer and Groupe des Six member Francis Poulenc for his 1940 piece Banalités, FP 107: ii. Hôtel.

Keimzeit Akustik Quintett – Sympathique

Motorbikin’ with Mademoiselle

carolacThe promo sheet tells us that Caroline Lacaze moved to Hamburg last year, and that’s where she also recorded her debut album En Route. It’s an okay one, though she’s apparently still under way; somehow the CD feels like she’s a bit undecided where she’s really heading, riding along the city limits of Chanson Beach, Funk Falls or Soulboro, and stopping a few times on the outskirts of Sixtiesville looking out for April March and Fabienne Delsol – including the instrumental garage beat of Road Stop and a cover version of Brigitte & Serge’s immortal 1967 Harley Davidson that suddenly sounds like that machine was always part of the feelgood soul soundtrack of The Commitments.

Caroline Lacaze – Harley Davidson