Françoise in Italian

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 7 min

Françoise in Italian
Compilation album by
Released1970
RecordedStudio CBE, Paris, France
GenrePop
Length26:50
LanguageItalian
LabelWorld Record Co. (South Africa)
ProducerFrançoise Hardy (Production Hypopotam[1])
Françoise Hardy chronology
Françoise
(1970)
Françoise in Italian
(1970)
Soleil
(1970)

Françoise in Italian is a compilation album by the French popular singer Françoise Hardy where all songs are in Italian language. This compilation was only published in South Africa in 1970 under label World Record Co.[2] It contains ten titles published in singles under Italian label Compagnia Generale del Disco, of 1968 to 1970.

From Italy towards South Africa

[edit]

Since the release of her first album in Italian, Françoise Hardy recorded many singles in Italian which, while not made into a record of its own, were parlayed into various single collections in Italy. In 1968, when the singer changed distributive firm into Italy,[3] a dozen titles were recorded until 1970 but no album was released, unless one counts a compilation, wherein half the songs were in French with the other half in Italian.[4] At the end of her contract with her former label and after having broken with Vogue, Hardy made this compilation, released under the guise of Hypopotam, the production company she founded in 1970.[5] However, this compilation does not collect those ten songs[6] This compilation was only distributed in South Africa, where Hardy's discs sold well and where she received a positive reception for the tour she undertook there from February 26 to March 16, 1968.[7]

Track listing

[edit]
Side 1
No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."La bilancia dell'amore" ("Tiny Goddess"[8])Vito PallaviciniPatrick Campbell-Lyons, Alex Spyropoulos3:10
2."Il male d'amore" ("À quoi ça sert ?"[9])Herbert PaganiFrançoise Hardy3:27
3."Io conosco la vita" ("À la fin de l’été (Tu sais)"[10])Alberto TestaGérard Bourgeois2:37
4."Stivali di vernice blu" ("Des bottes rouges de Russie"[11])Herbert PaganiAndré Popp2:45
5."C'e la fortuna" ("There but for fortune"[12])Herbert PaganiPhil Ochs3:10
6."Il mare, le stelle, il vento" ("La Mer, les étoiles et le vent"[13])AnnaritaFrançoise Hardy1:50
Total length:17:00
Side 2
No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."L'ora blu" ("L'Heure bleue"[9])Herbert PaganiFrançoise Hardy1:45
2."Se e ma" ("Avec des si"[9])Herbert PaganiFrançoise Hardy3:07
3."Il pretesto" ("It Hurts To Say Goodbye"[14])Claudio DaianoArnold Goland, arr. Serge Gainsbourg2:23
4."Lungo il mare"Luigi Albertelli, RenzettiTorrebruno2:16
Total length:9:50

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Firme created by Françoise Hardy in 1970 (source: Françoise Hardy, Le Désespoir des singes… et autres bagatelles, Éditions Robert Laffont, Paris, France, 2008, p. 108).
  2. ^ Catalogue number: ORC 6072.
  3. ^ Contract signed with Compagnia Generale del Disco: Billboard of October 26th, 1968, pages 79 and 87.
  4. ^ "La bilancia dell'amore" ("Tiny Goddess" / "Je ne sais pas ce que je veux"), "Il male d'amore" ("À quoi ça sert ?"), "Io conosco la vita" ("À la fin de l’été (Tu sais)" / "La Fin de l’été"), "Se e ma" ("Avec des si") and "Il pretesto" ("It Hurts To Say Goodbye" / "Comment te dire adieu ?"), Released in 1969 by Compagnia Generale del Disco (FGS 5052).
  5. ^ Françoise Hardy, Le Désespoir des singes… et autres bagatelles, Éditions Robert Laffont, Paris, France, 2008, pages 107-108-109.
  6. ^ The two forsaken songs are: "Sole ti amo" ("Sunshine" / "Soleil") and "Il granchio" ("Le Crabe"), released en 1970 on single, Sole ti amo, Prod. Hypopotam/Compagnia Generale del Disco (N 9821).
  7. ^ Étienne Daho Jérôme Soligny, Françoise Hardy, superstar et ermite, Jacques Grancher editions, Paris, France, 1986, page 45.
  8. ^ Title of the original song, written by Ray Singer and performed by Nirvana; adapted and sung in French by Françoise Hardy under the title, "Je ne sais pas ce que je veux", in 1968.
  9. ^ a b c Title of the original song, written and registered by par Françoise Hardy in 1968.
  10. ^ Title of the original song written by Jean-Max Rivière, performed by Gérard Bourgeois in 1963, taken again by Brigitte Bardot in 1964 then by Françoise Hardy under title, "La Fin de l’été", in 1967 (see album: Ma jeunesse fout le camp....
  11. ^ Title of the original song written by Jean-Michel Rivat et Frank Thomas; performed par Françoise Hardy in 1969.
  12. ^ Title of the original song written and registered by Phil Ochs in 1964. Joan Baez made a success of them in 1965 (see album Joan Baez/5). Adapted in French language by Eddy Marnay under title, "Où va la chance ?", performed in 1965 by Dominique Walter, then taken again by Françoise Hardy en 1969.
  13. ^ Title of the original song, written and registered by par Françoise Hardy in 1969.
  14. ^ Title of the original song, written by Jack Gold ; created in 1966 by Margaret Whiting at the end 1966 (in album The Wheel Of Hurt), take again by Vera Lynn in 1967. Adapted in French language by Serge Gainsbourg under title, "Comment te dire adieu", performed by Françoise Hardy in 1968 (see album: Françoise Hardy (1968 album).

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Françoise_in_Italian
26 views |
Download as ZWI file
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF