Georges Brassens
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Georges Brassens (October 22, 1921 - October 29, 1981) was a French singer and songwriter.
Georges Brassens was born in Sète, in southern France. An iconic figure in France, he achieved fame through his simple, elegant songs and articulate, diverse lyrics; indeed, he is considered one of France's best postwar poets, and won the national poetry prize. In addition, he set to music poems by many well-known and relatively obscure poets, including Louis Aragon (Il n'y a pas d'amour heureux), Victor Hugo, Jean Richepin and others.
During World War II, he was obliged to work for the Germans, in the Service de Travail Obligatoire, forced labour. There were many other celebrities, and celebrities to be. Here Brassens met some of his future friends, such as Pierre Onteniente, whom he called Gibralter because he was steady as a rock, and who would become his closest friend. After being given ten days permission in France, he decided not to go back to the labour camp. He took refuge in a little slum called "Impasse Florimont" where he lived for several years with the owner of the place, Jeanne Planche, who was a friend of his aunt. Jeanne lived with her husband Marcel in a dead end, without gas, water or electricity. Brassens would remain there 22 years. He had to remain hidden there until the end of the war (which occurred five months later). Brassens made a song to her called La Jeanne.
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The beginning of his career
His friends who heard his songs and liked them urged him to go and try them out in a cabaret, café or concert hall. He was modest and had difficulties showing himself in front of people. The owner of a cafe told him that his songs were not the type he was looking for. But one time he met a singer called Patachou in a very known cafe, Les Trois Baudets, and she brought him into the music scene. Several famous singers have come into the music industry this way, such as Jacques Brel, or Léo Férré.
Songs
He rarely performed outside his own country, and his lyrics are hard to translate, though attempts have been made. He began his career in the 1950s. Among his most famous songs:
- Les copains d'abord, about a boat of that name, and friendship;
- Chanson pour l'Auvergnat, lauding those who take care of the downtrodden against the pettiness of the bourgeois and the harshness of law enforcement;
- La cane de Jeanne for Marcel and Jeanne Planche, who befriended and sheltered him; and others
- La mauvaise réputation - "the bad reputation", semi-autobiography;
- Les amoureux des bancs publics - about young lovers who kiss each other publicly and shock self-righteous people;
- Le gorille – tells, in a humoristic fashion, about a gorilla with a large penis (and admired for this by ladies) who escapes and, mistaking a robed judge for a woman, forcefully sodomizes him; the song contrasts the wooden attitude that the judge had when sentencing a man to death by the guillotine, with his cries of mercy when being assaulted by the gorilla; this song, considered pornographic, was banned for a while; the song's refrain (Gare au gori – i – i – i – ille, "beware the gorilla") is widely known; (translated by Jake Thackray as Brother Gorilla).
- La fessée ("the spanking"), about a man being seduced by a widow, being offended by her, spanking her, then being seduced finally.
He died of cancer in 1981, in Saint-Gély-du-Fesc, near Sète, having suffered health problems for many years.
Nowadays
He never suspected that one day he'll have an international renown, because his idol, Paul Misraki, a singer who sang in everyplace, never became famous among the general public. Nowadays, more than 50 doctoral dissertions are about Georges Brassens, and many artists from Japan, Russia, United States (where there is a Georges Brassens' fan club), Italy and Spain made covers of his songs. There are even some translations of his songs in Esperanto. His songs are translated in 20 languages.
Many singers covered Georges Brassens lyrics in others languages, for instance Graeme Allwright (in english), Sam Alpha (in creole), Paco Ibañez (in spanish) and Jacques Ivart (in esperanto). Nowadays, there is an international association of Georges Brassens fans.
Brassens totally composed about 250 songs, but only 200 were recorded. The other 50 are unfinished.
Renée Claude, an important Quebecker singer, dedicates a tribute-album to him, J'ai rendez-vous avec vous (1993).
Heritage sites
A lot of schools, theaters, parks, public gardens, and public places are dedicated to Georges Brassens and his work, and are called after him, for instance:
- A park, that Paris's council wanted in the former Vaugirard slaughterhouses' site, has been called parc Georges Brassens. Brassens lived a main part of his life closed to this place, about hundred meters from it, at the 9 impasse Florimont and then at the 42 rue Santos Dumont.
- The Place du Marché of Brive-la-Gaillarde was renamed Place Georges Brassens, as a tribute to women that had had a clash here with the french gendarmerie, clash he evoked in one of his songs, Hécatombe.
External links
- {{{2|{{{name|Georges Brassens}}}}}} at The Internet Movie Database
- Template:Fr http://www.georges-brassens.com/
- Template:Fr http://georgesbrassens.artistes.universalmusic.fr/
- Template:Fr http://www.aupresdesonarbre.com/
- Template:Fr http://www.analysebrassens.com/br:Georges Brassens
cs:Georges Brassens de:Georges Brassens es:Georges Brassens eo:Georges Brassens fr:Georges Brassens it:Georges Brassens he:ז'ורז' ברסנס nl:Georges Brassens no:Georges Brassens ru:Брассенс, Жорж simple:Georges Brassens sl:Georges Brassens sv:Georges Brassens tr:Georges Brassens