Category: Music
Chanson Du Jour: Tilted
Christine & The Queens – “Tilted” from Top Of The Pops, Christmas 2016
Héloïse Letissier – my God, is she not wonderful?
[Mike Stevenson / Pas de Merde]
Chanson Du Jour from Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Ségal
Mali’s great kora player Ballaké Sissoko and eclectic French cellist Vincent Ségal perform live. Said NPR music reporter Bob Boylen, “The interplay between this African harp and the cello was transcendent.”
I look forward to hearing these two virtuosos performing live in Boston in March.
The Voice of a Different Generation
Héloïse Letissier discussed her music, identity and the faith in this generation
It can be difficult to know where Héloïse Letissier ends and her on-stage persona Christine and the Queens begins. She’s happy to clarify. “It’s really the same thing,” she says. “Christine is just me, Héloïse, without the boundaries.”
The Nantes-born performer, 28, is part of a new genre of musicians eschewing the explicit femininity often associated with pop music and instead embracing fluid notions of gender through performance, lyrics and attire; Letissier’s go-to outfit is an androgynous two-piece tailored suit.
The release of her catchy synth-pop debut album Chaleur Humaine (‘Human Warmth’) has made her a star in Europe, where she has performed alongside such luminaries as Madonna and Elton John. In October she begins her first, much-anticipated U.S. headline tour, accompanied by male dancers, her ‘Queens’.
Watch the video interview with Héloïse Letissier
It’s a lot of attention for someone who says she was a loner as a child. Letissier remembers unsuccessfully trying to fit in with her peers, being far more comfortable reading than socialising. She was bullied, but found solace in a love of words. “Because I was always writing, people would ask me to help them write love letters, like Cyrano de Bergerac.” [ . . . ]
Full Story: The Voice of a Different Generation | TIME
RIP, Léo Marjane
Léo Marjane, a star of the French music hall in the 1930s and ’40s, whose heart-wrenching ballad “Alone Tonight” became a signature song of occupied France, died on Sunday at her home in Barbizon, France. She was 104.
Grand Corps Malade
A friend in Paris recently turned me on to this amazing talent known as Grand Corps Malade. Also known as Fabien Marsaud, the poet performs both a capella, and occasionally accompanied by a small jazz ensemble.
I love this video “Pocahontas,” which features family members and friends recreating photographs from their past.
In 1997, a diving accident left Marsaud unable to walk for a period of two years. Marsaud claimed the name “Grand Corps Malade” (meaning “Tall Sick Body” in French) in reference to his condition as well as his height (nearly 6’4″). The former basketball star regained the ability to walk in 1999, and started his career as “slam poet” in 2003.
2013’s Funambule is the fourth studio album, with the musical direction of musician and trumpet player Ibrahim Maalouf. The album Continue reading “Grand Corps Malade”