Love Is Blue Lyrics French
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from the album Marty Robbins - All-Time Greatest Hits ·Copyright: Writer(s): Pierre Cour, Andre Charles Jean Popp, Bryan Andre Blackburn Lyrics Terms of Use
Blue, blue, my world is blue
Blue is my world since I'm without you
Grey, grey, my love is grey
Cold is my heart since you went away.
Red, red, my eyes are red
Cryin' for you alone in my bed
Green, green, my jealous heart
I doubted you and now we're apart.
When we met
How the bright sun shone
Then love died
Now rainbow is gone.
--- Instrumental ---
Related
Black, black, the nights are now
Longing for you so lost and alone
Gone, gone, the love we knew
Blue is my world since I'm without you..
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Background information | |
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Birth name | Paul Julien André Mauriat |
Born | 4 March 1925 Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France |
Died | 3 November 2006 (aged 81) Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France |
Genres | Classical, easy listening, Rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician, orchestra leader, composer |
Instruments | Piano, Organ |
Years active | 1943–1998 |
Labels | Philips, Pony Canyon, Universal |
Associated acts |
Paul Julien André Mauriat (French: [pɔl mɔʁja] or [moʁja]; 4 March 1925 – 3 November 2006) was a French orchestra leader, conductor of Le Grand Orchestre de Paul Mauriat, who specialized in the easy listening genre. He is best known in the United States for his million-selling remake of André Popp's 'Love is Blue', which was #1 for 5 weeks in 1968. Other recordings for which he is known include 'El Bimbo', 'Toccata', 'Love in Every Room/Même si tu revenais', and 'Penelope'.[citation needed]
Biography[edit]
In 1925, Mauriat was born in Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France, where he also grew up. His father was a postal inspector who loved to play classical piano and violin.[1]
In 1929, at the age of four, Mauriat began playing music. Six years later, in 1935, at the age of 10, he enrolled in the Conservatoire in Marseille, but by the time he was 17, around 1942, he had fallen in love with jazz and popular music.[1]
In the 1940s, starting during World War II, Mauriat started his own dance band and toured concert halls throughout Europe.[1]
In the 1950s, Mauriat became musical director to at least two well-known French singers, Charles Aznavour and Maurice Chevalier, touring with both of them.[1]
In 1957, Mauriat released his first EP, Paul Mauriat, a four track RGM release. Between 1959–1964, Mauriat recorded several albums on the Bel-Air record label under the name Paul Mauriat et Son Orchestre, as well as using the various pseudonyms of Richard Audrey, Nico Papadopoulos, Eduardo Ruo, and Willy Twist, to better reflect the international flavor of his recordings. During this period, Mauriat also released several recordings with Les Satellites, where he creatively arranged vocal backing harmony for such albums as Slow Rock and Twist (1961), A Malypense (1962), and Les Satellites Chantent Noel (1964).[citation needed]
Mauriat composed the music for several French movie soundtracks (also released on Bel-Air), including Un Taxi Pour Tobrouk (1961), Horace 62 (1962), and Faites Sauter La Banque (1964).[citation needed]
Mauriat wrote his first song with André Pascal. In 1958, they were prizewinners in the le Coq d'or de la Chanson Française with Rendez-vous au Lavandou. Using the pseudonym of Del Roma, Mauriat was to have his first international hit with Chariot, which he wrote in collaboration with friends Franck Pourcel (co-composer), Jacques Plante (French lyrics) and Raymond Lefèvre (orchestrator). In the United States, the song was recorded as 'I Will Follow Him' by Little Peggy March and spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1963. In 1992, the song was featured prominently in the film Sister Act starring Whoopi Goldberg. More recently, Eminem included an extract in his song, Guilty Conscience.[citation needed]
Between 1967 and 1972, he wrote numerous songs with André Pascal for Mireille Mathieu; Mon Crédo (1,335,000 copies sold), Viens dans ma rue, La première étoile, Géant, etc.—to name but a few—and contributed 130 song arrangements for Charles Aznavour.[citation needed]
In 1965, Mauriat established Le Grand Orchestre de Paul Mauriat, and released hundreds of recordings and compilations through the Philips label for the next 28 years. In 1994, he signed with Japanese record company Pony Canyon, where he re-recorded some of his greatest hits and wrote new compositions. Mauriat recorded many of these albums in both Paris and London, utilising several English classical musicians in these recordings.[citation needed]
In 1968, his late 1967 cover of the André Popp/Pierre Cour tune 'L'amour est bleu' ('Love Is Blue') became a number 1 hit in the US. The song spent five weeks at the top of the charts. Two other Mauriat singles also made the charts in the US — 'Love in Every Room'/'Même si tu revenais' (recorded in 1965; charted in 1968) and the title theme from the movie 'Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang'. 'Love Is Blue' was the first instrumental to hit number 1 on the Billboard charts since the Tornados hit with 'Telstar' in 1962 and the only American number-one single to be recorded in France. The success of the song and the album on which it appeared, Blooming Hits, established Mauriat as an international recording star.[citation needed]
In 1969, Mauriat started his first world tour with his Grand Orchestra, visiting countries like the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Brazil and other Latin American countries.[citation needed]
In 1970s and 1980s, Mauriat released the entire albums that paid homage to his musical roots. 'Paul Mauriat joue Chopin', 'Classics in the Air' (volumes 1,2,3) features classical music, like Chopin's 'Grande valse brillante', Bach's “Toccata and Fugue in D Minor”, and Pachelbel's “Canon”, given the “Mauriat” spin.[citation needed]
Paul Mauriat's phenomenon in Japan started in the early 1970s. He is the only international artist who played two sold-out shows in one day at the famous arena Nippon Budokan in Tokyo.[2]
For several decades, some of Mauriat's compositions served as musical tracks for Soviet television programmes and short movies, such as the 1977 animated Polygon (film), 'In the world of animals' (V mire zhivotnykh) and 'Kinopanorama', among others.[citation needed]
Mauriat retired from performing in 1998. He gave his final performance in the Sayonara Concert, recorded live in Osaka, Japan, but his orchestra continued to tour around the world before his death in 2006. Mauriat's former lead pianist, Gilles Gambus, became the orchestra's conductor in 2000 and led successful tours of Japan, China, and Russia. Gambus had worked with Mauriat for more than 25 years. In 2005, classical French Horn instrumentalist, Jean-Jacques Justafré conducted the orchestra during a tour of Japan and Korea.[citation needed]
In 2002, Serge Elhaik published an authorised biography, Paul Mauriat: une vie en bleu.[3] Meddings drill thru manual.
On 3 November 2006, Paul Mauriat died in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France, at the age of 81.[4] After his death, The Paul Mauriat Grand Orchestra also ceased to exist.[citation needed]
Mauriat is buried at the Perpignan South Cemetery in Columbarium.[citation needed]
Career and awards[edit]
Relative to his peers, Paul Mauriat has one of the largest recording catalogs, featuring more than 1,000 titles just from his Polygram era (1965–1993). Cossacks 3 build order. He was awarded the Grand Prix (Grand Prize) from the French recording industry, a MIDEM trophy, and in 1997 won the prestigious distinction of Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres from the French Ministry of Culture. He sold over 40 million albums worldwide and held 28 tours in Japan from 1969 to 1998.[citation needed]
In the early to mid-1980s, Paul Mauriat appeared in several Japanese coffee and wine television commercials, which featured music from his orchestra.[citation needed]
A line of saxophones and trumpets are named for Paul Mauriat, under the brand P. Mauriat, reflecting his popularity in their country of origin, Taiwan.[citation needed]
Both Mauriat's single recording 'Love is Blue' (1967) and the album Blooming Hits each sold over one million copies. The single was awarded a gold disc by the Recording Industry Association of America in March 1968.[5]
Discography[edit]
Singles[edit]
- 'Puppet on a String' (1967)
- 'Love Is Blue' (U.S. #1, 1968; AC #1, 1968)
- 'Love In Every Room' (U.S. #60, 1968; AC #7, 1968)
- 'San Francisco' (U.S. #103, 1968; AC #16, 1968)
- 'Chitty Chitty Bang Bang' (U.S. #76, 1969; AC #24, 1969)
- 'Hey Jude' (U.S. #119, 1969; AC # 24, 1969)
- 'Je T'aime Moi Non Plus' (AC #35, January 1970)
- 'Gone Is Love' (AC #32, September 1970)
- 'Apres Toi (Come What May)' (AC #21, 1972)
- 'Love Theme from 'The Godfather' (Butterfly) (1972)
- 'Taka Takata' (1972)
Albums[edit]
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See also[edit]
- Faites sauter la banque! (film, 1964)
References[edit]
- ^ abcdErlewine, Stephen Thomas. 'Paul Mauriat Biography'. AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- ^Abramoff, Alexander (2016). 'Paul Mauriat's music will always be with people in Japan'. Grand Orchestras. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- ^'Obituaries - Paul Mauriat, Orchestrator of 'Love is Blue''. The Independent. 9 November 2006.
- ^'Paul Mauriat, 81, French Orchestra Leader, Dies'. The New York Times. Agence France-Presse. 7 November 2006. p. A19.
- ^Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 226. ISBN0-214-20512-6.
- ^'Ca Ne Fait Rien Les Couilles, Voici Paul Mauriat'. Discogs. 1978. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
Bibliography[edit]
External links[edit]
- Paul Mauriat discography at Discogs
- Paul Mauriat on IMDb
- Paul Mauriat at Find a Grave