• Libb@piefed.social
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    12 days ago

    I have not a single one, so my apologies for the longish reply ;)

    A few of my all time favorites non-English are from French (like me) singers. Older ones, like me: people like Jacques Brel, Georges Brassens, Serge Gainsbourg, Edith Piaf,… And so many more. I’m nearing my 60s and I’ve been listening to some of them since I was a very young boy, aged 7 or 8, on my parent’s HiFi (who also introduced me to classical music, my absolute favorite type of music).

    What follow is anything but a full list of my favorites. It’s a very limited selection among those I consider my lifelong companions:

    If anyone has managed to reach that point, listening to all the songs, and is wondering: yes, I also listen to much more contemporary French (and non French) artists. In many various genres.

    French language always was and still is about telling a story, about playing with words and with sounds, exactly like poetry. Which is most I care about as a reader/listener. Contemporary French singers do understand that as well as their predecessors did. They just don’t use the same rhythms anymore and don’t share the exact same stories (well, fundamentals remain unchanged: love, hate, sadness, fun,… but how they express it changes), and they’re certainly not less talented! But no matter how much I appreciate the work of some of them, and I do, they are not the singers I grew old with so I would not call them my favorites ;)

    … I would even less dare call them favorites in our over-chastised sad times, populated with countless self-entitled white knights always looking for an opportunity to tell everyone else what they should and should not do, what they should like and not like. Because what would those people say of an almost 60 years old dude openly admitting he do enjoy listening to, say, the young (Belgian) singer Angèle? Bruxelles, je t’aime, J’entends or Tout oublier? A bit like, nearing my 60 I enjoy as much as I enjoyed it in my teens, if not more, listening to 16th century French music, or reading 15 and 16th century French poetry too.

    • 𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖜𝖎𝖙𝖈𝖍@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Parlez-vous français? J’adore aussi la musique française, en particulier Edith Piaf et Jacques Brel. La Foule est mon coup de cœur.

      Vous connaissez «Bonnie and Clyde» par Brigitte Bardot? Je crois que ça vous plairait

      • Libb@piefed.social
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        12 days ago

        Parlez-vous français?

        I’m French ;)

        La foule is a great song, like many of Piaf.

        For Brel, if I had to pick a single song… I would never do that but say for some odd reason I had to… it would be one of those two. One of which is indeed among my all time favorites, the other not as much but still touched me very deeply at a rather young age, and stayed with me: La quête, or Orly.

          • Libb@piefed.social
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            12 days ago

            :)

            I can assure you when I speak English everyone instantly knows I’m French, my accent is quite French ;)

          • Cheesus@lemmy.ca
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            12 days ago

            Try being Canadian, it’s even more insulting!

            Although to be fair, this never happens outside of Paris.