From Camille’s brilliant 2002 album Le Sac des Filles
Category: Music
Chanson Du Jour: L’Amour Est Bleu
Yesterday’s Chanson Du Jour was Petula Clark’s French lyric version of her 1968 hit This Is My Song. A year earlier in 1967, Paul Mauriat cover of the Andre Popp / Pierre Cour tune L’Amour Est Bleu (“Love Is Blue”) became a number 1 hit in the US.
This version is from British folksinger Flo Morrisey, 2015
Paul Mauriat’s instrumnetal version, 1967
Chanson Du Jour: C’est ma Chanson
Pet Clark’s English language version This Is My Song, reached No. 1 on the charts on 16 February 1967. C’est Ma Chanson reached #1 in France and #3 on the chart for Belgium.
Legend has it, that Charlie Chaplin intended his song to be sung by Al Jolson. Oh, Mammy!
Chanson du Jour: Five Minutes
HER – the sexy and soulful French duo of Victor Solf and Simon Carpentier – perform live last summer The Great Escape Festival in Brighton.
Etienne Comar’s “Django Melodies”

I’m greatly anticipating the upcoming release of Etienne Comar’s film,”Django Melodies,” which aims to tell a chapter from the extraordinary life story of legendary French jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt , specifically Django’s adventures trying to flee from Nazi persecution during World War II.
Reinhardt co-founded the iconic Quintette du Hot Club de France with violinist Stéphane Grappelli in the 1930s. He is regarded as the father of jazz manouche, or gypsy jazz.
The movie stars Reda Kateb as Django, Cécile De France (so terrific in the Dardenne Brothers‘ The Kid With the Bike) and the beautiful Hungarian folk singer Palya Bea.
The cast certainly looks the part (see below.) The proof of the pudding (or better, gypsy goulash) will be Comar’s telling of Django’s thrilling story fleeing the Nazis, and not in any attempted recreation of Django’s guitar playing. Woody Allen’s Sweet and Lowdown was a very good movie, and Sean Penn received a well-deserved Oscar nomination for his portrayal as the Django-obsessed “Emmet,” despite the fact that Penn’s guitar fingering was not particularly realistic. Certainly, the manner in which Django’s wonderful gypsy jazz music is presented will help determine the film’s success, but hopefully there will be few closeups of guitar fingering. Why bother?
Django Melodies marks the directorial debut of Comar, who also co-wrote the script with Alexis Salatko. Dutch jazz band Rosenberg Trio re-recorded Reinhardt’s music for the film’s soundtrack.
– [Mike Stevenson / Pas De Merde]

Django, sa femme, son groupe et… Etienne Comar, le réalisateur
Penned by Etienne Comar together with Alexis Salatko, and based on the novel Folles de Django, written by the latter, the story kicks off during the German occupation in 1943.
Gypsy Django Reinhardt, a true “guitar hero”, is at the top of his game. Every evening, he thrills the Paris smart set at the Folies Bergères cabaret music hall with his swing music, while elsewhere in Europe his brethren are being hunted down and butchered.
When the German propaganda machine wants to send him to Berlin for a series of concerts, he senses he is in danger and decides to escape to Switzerland with the help of one of his female admirers, Louise de Klerk. In order to make it there, he heads to Thonon-les-Bains on the shores of Lake Geneva with his pregnant wife, Naguine, and his mother, Negros. But the escape attempt turns out to be more complicated than anticipated, and Django and his family find themselves plunged headfirst into war.
Nevertheless, even during this dramatic period, he remains an exceptional musician who puts up a fight through his music and his sense of humour, and who seeks to attain musical perfection. [http://cineuropa.org/]
‘It’s about the woman’: Meet rising French band, Her
The future stars talk about Her Tape No.1, their influences + being mistaken for an English band | Gigwise
“We are focussing on Her Tape No.1. It begins by talking about the dreaming, the lust for a woman, and that’s our track ‘Quite Like’. Then you have the love encounter with ‘Five Minutes’,” reveals Her’s Victor Solf, as co-founder and fellow band leader Simon Carpentier nods in agreement. “Then you have the experience of missing someone in ‘Her’, and finally you have the wedding in ‘Union’.”
This love story EP has won a lot of hearts in France since the Rennes-based band released it on vinyl through a French indie last month. However, their first ever digital release was ‘Quite Like’ in April. Although the full EP isn’t out digitally yet, Soundcloud streams have hit over a quarter of a million across their two releases, and plays have largely come from the UK and the US.
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Read Full Story: ‘It’s about the woman’: Meet rising French band, Her | Gigwise