Daniel Balavoine
Daniel Balavoine | |
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Barclay Records–Universal Music Group (1975–1986) |
Daniel Xavier-Marie Balavoine (French pronunciation: [danjɛl ɡzavje maʁi balavwan]; 5 February 1952 – 14 January 1986) was a French singer and songwriter. He was hugely popular in the French-speaking world in the early 1980s; he inspired many singers of his generation such as Jean-Jacques Goldman, Michel Berger, who was his closest friend, as well as the Japanese pop-rock group Crystal King. Balavoine was a part of the original cast of the rock opera Starmania in 1978, which was written by Berger.
Balavoine also took part in motorsports and French political life; he is known for a 1980 televised verbal confrontation with then-Socialist presidential candidate François Mitterrand. In the French music business, he earned his place with his powerful voice, wide range and recognisable lyrics, which were full of sadness and revolt. His songs dealt in themes of despair, pain and death, although hope was present as well.[dubious ]
Biography
Childhood
Balavoine was born on 5 February 1952 in Alençon, France.
With Présence
Having fully decided to make a living in music, he began to perform as a ballroom singer in Pau, covering Bob Dylan songs. In 1971, he moved to Paris but was disappointed and returned to Pau. Soon afterwards, he answered an audition in Paris to join a hard rock band, Présence, whose singer had just left. Another future singer, Laurent Voulzy, was his main competition for that position. Ultimately, Balavoine was chosen and went into the studio. The band soon released an album which wasn't a big success. Despite that, they toured all over France. In 1972, the band signed a contract with Warner Music Group but Balavoine quit the group.[citation needed]
Difficulties in Solo Career
In 1973, while he was working as a record dealer,
In 1974, Patrick Juvet, one of the biggest performers in France at the time, offered him the opportunity to be the opening act on his next tour. Balavoine wrote a song for him, "Couleurs d'Automne", which appeared on Juvet's following album.
While attending a show,
While recording the album, he met Catherine Ferry, who was chosen as the French candidate for the next Eurovision Song Contest, to take place in the Netherlands. Ferry came in second place with Balavoine and his brother on back-up vocals. This success led to Balavoine and Ferry developing a strong friendship. Balavoine would go on to write most of her songs following her Eurovision success.
In 1977, Balavoine released a second record, "Les aventures de Simon et Gunther" but again it sold poorly and Eddie Barclay began getting impatient.
Initial Success
Starmania
In 1978, Michel Berger, who had just finished writing Starmania, was still looking for the singer to portray the "Johnny Rockfort" character. While watching TV, he was impressed by Balavoine, who was singing the title song from his latest successful album.[contradictory] He immediately hired Balavoine and a strong brotherly relationship began between the two singers.
Released a few months later, Starmania was a phenomenal success and most of its songs hit the charts. Balavoine performed three of them: "Quand on arrive en ville", "Banlieue Nord" and, most notably, "S.O.S. d'un terrien en détresse", which was written specifically for Balavoine's voice. "SOS D'un terrien en detresse" became a huge hit nationwide and around the world.[3] In 1992, Peter Kingsbery, the lead singer of the American band Cock Robin, adapted the song in English for Tycoon; the song, named "Only the Very Best," built on the same melody and similar arrangements, but with very different lyrics (by Tim Rice), was also a big hit in France.[4]
Balavoine's solo career was soon very successful, as well, with the release of his third album Le chanteur. The title song, which spoke vividly of the unstoppable rise and fall of an aspiring singer,[5] was a huge commercial success, with one million units sold. The album itself sold 800,000 copies.
At the same time, Balavoine continued touring with Starmania, becoming one of its most notable faces. Between April and May 1979, the musical was performed at the Palais des congrès in Paris, before 100,000 spectators, further increasing Balavoine's popularity.
In 1979, he released his fourth album, Face amour / Face amère (Love side/Bitter side). Though it enjoyed moderate success, its sold fewer copies than the previous album. "Me laisse pas m'en aller" and "Ces petit riens" were the biggest hits from the record. Even still, this last opus allowed him to put on a very successful solo tour throughout France for the first time, with the high point being a three-day stint at the Olympia.
Un Autre Monde
In 1980, Balavoine returned with his fifth studio album Un autre monde. This record was particularly successful, with three songs hitting huge commercial success: "Mon fils, ma bataille", with 543,000 units sold (about a father's struggle to claim the custody of his son in the aftermath of a breakup, a similar theme to the 1979 movie Kramer vs. Kramer); "Je ne suis pas un héros",[6] originally written for Johnny Hallyday (who later inserted it in his own set list in tribute); and "La vie ne m'apprend rien".
Balavoine went on tour again and came back to the Olympia for four sold-out shows, which gave birth to his first live album Daniel Balavoine en concert in November 1981.
Vendeur de Larmes
During the winter of 1981, Balavoine went to Ibiza, Spain to write his sixth album. Balavoine decided to radically change his musical style, making it more rock-oriented and using electronic effects. In April 1982, Vendeur de larmes (a pun between "tears" and "weapons") was released, containing hits, such as "Vivre ou Survivre",[7] "Dieu que l'amour est triste" and "Soulève-moi".[8]
The album hit a huge success becoming a
International Work
Loin des yeux de l'Occident
In 1983, Balavoine participated in his first
The melody[
During the same year, he also starred in the musical
Following a
In 1984, Balavoine returned on the road for a yearlong tour across France. For this new tour, Balavoine introduced new technologies like Vari-Lite lights and HF tech. Balavoine looked for the perfect sound and the perfect ambiance rather than the set, which was furnished sparsely. All his songs were rewritten with very pronounced rock arrangements.
In July, at age 31, Balavoine became a father for the first time. Touched and blessed by the event, he wrote a brand new song "Dieu que c'est beau!" ("God it's so beautiful!") and included it in his tour set list.
He also wrote a full album for his friend Catherine Ferry, using for the first time his
Sauver l'amour
In 1985, many prominent music stars were involved in charities and humanitarian events.
French singers, including Balavoine, organised their own event, Singers Without Borders, which was not a big success mostly because of the expensive price of the tickets.[citation needed] Nevertheless, the concert album sold well.
During the Summer, Balavoine went back in Scotland for his eighth and last record: Sauver l'amour. The French artist innovates again using his Fairlight and it is the first album released on CD.[dubious ] The Fairlight allows Balavoine to insert a lot of electronic effects and sound never heard before.[citation needed]
Most songs of the album became hits: "
Daniel Balavoine received, as a posthumous title, the Victoire de la Musique Album of the Year Award in 1986 for Sauver l'amour.
Death
In 1986, Daniel Balavoine was chosen to lead a fund-raising effort aimed at building water wells in Africa. He was invited by
On 14 January 1986, whilst in Mali, Balavoine, Sabine, a reporter, and her cameraman boarded Sabine's
The news of the deaths of Sabine and Balavoine plunged France into deep grief. Balavoine was buried in Biarritz.[10]
Activism
Beginning in 1968, Balavoine became interested in French political life. During the massive strikes and social turmoil in May of that year, he first thought about going into politics. But the end of the movement and General de Gaulle's comeback disappointed him, and he turned his mind to music. In 1980, he confronted François Mitterrand, who was at this time the National Secretary of the French Socialist Party and a French presidential candidate, during a France 2 evening news broadcast, leaving the entire room speechless. During a seven-minute spontaneous speech, an angry Balavoine expressed how he felt about the political situation of the youth in France, namely that the youth completely was ignored by the political world, only interested in their own stuff.[11]
He supported his friend
Legacy
The French public look proudly[citation needed] upon songs like "Vivre ou survivre" (1982), "Dieu que c'est beau" (1984), "L'Aziza", "Sauver l'amour", "Aimer est plus fort que d'être aimé", and "Tous les cris, les SOS" (1985), comparing Balavoine favourably[citation needed] to English language groups like Eurythmics, Queen and Depeche Mode.
Balavoine's songs have been interpreted by many artists, for example Catherine Ferry for whom he wrote nearly 20 songs, Jeanne Mas, Liane Foly, Frida Lyngstad, Lena Ka, Johnny Hallyday, Pascal Obispo, Patrick Fiori, Florent Pagny, Grégory Lemarchal, as well as Marie Denise Pelletier (from Quebec) who had an enormous success with her own rendition of the song "Tous les cris, les SOS" in 1987.[citation needed]
In 1986, Belgian francophone artist
On June 1, 2021, Google celebrated him with a Google Doodle.[12]
Discography
Studio albums
- De vous à elle en passant par moi (1975)
- Les aventures de Simon et Gunther ... Stein (1977)
- Le chanteur (1978)
- Face amour / Face amère (1979)
- Un autre monde (1980)
- Vendeurs de larmes (1982)
- Loin des yeux de l'Occident (1983)
- Sauver l'amour (1985)
Live albums
- Sur scène (1981)
- Au Palais des Sports (1984)
Compilations
- Ses 7 premières compositions (1986)
- L'essentiel (1999)
- Sans frontières (2005; 12-CD box set containing all of his recorded works, studio and live)
- Balavoine (2012)
- 30ème anniversaire (2015)
- Les 50 plus belles chansons (2016)
- Intégrale (2020)
- L'album de sa vie - 100 titres (2021)
- Le meilleur de Daniel Balavoine (2021)
Singles
- "Le jour s'est levé" (1971)
- "Viens vite" (1973)
- "Évelyne et moi" (1975)
- "Vienne la pluie" (1975)
- "Sally" (with Melody S.A.) (1976)
- "Lady Marlène" (1977)
- "Ma musique et mon patois"(1977)
- "Je suis bien" (1978)
- "Le chanteur" (1978)
- "Banlieue nord" / "Quand on arrive en ville" (with Starmania) (1979)
- "Lucie" (1979)
- "Me laisse pas m'en aller" (1979)
- "Dancing samedi" (1979)
- "Tu me plais beaucoup" (1979)
- "Mon fils ma bataille" (1980)
- "Lipstick polychrome" (1980)
- "La vie ne m'apprend rien" (live) (1981)
- "Vivre ou survivre" (1982)
- "Vendeurs de larmes" (1982)
- "Soulève-moi" (1982)
- "Pour la femme veuve qui s'éveille" (1983)
- "Belle" (with Frida) (1983)
- "Les petits lolos" (1984)
- "Dieu que c'est beau" (1984)
- "L'Aziza" (1984)
- "Sauver l'amour" (1986)
- "Aimer est plus fort que d'être aimé" (1986)
- Posthumous
- "Frappe avec ta tête" (1989)
- "S.O.S. d'un terrien en détresse" (2016)
Other projects
- Starmania (1978) (sings 5 songs)
- Chrysalide, of Patrick Juvet (1974)
- Patrick Juvet vous raconte son rêve (1973)
- Catherine Ferry "Vivre avec la musique" - producer and composer (1984) WEA
- Abbacadabra (1983) – a children's musical based on songs of Swedish group ABBA
Filmography
- Alors... Heureux? (1980)
- Qu'est-ce qui fait craquer les filles... (1982)
External links
- Biography at Radio France Internationale (in English)
References
- ^ ISBN 978-1556527548.
- ^ Profile, dbalavoine.com; accessed 30 March 2015.
- ^ casper41 (9 August 2007), Daniel Balavoine:s.o.s d'un terrien en dértresse, archived from the original on 13 December 2021, retrieved 16 April 2019
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - YouTube
- YouTube
- YouTube
- YouTube
- YouTube
- ^ "Famous people who died in aviation accidents". www.planecrashinfo.com. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
- ^ "Ina.fr : Vidéo, radio, audio et publicité - Actualités, archives de la radio et de la télévision en ligne - Archives vidéo et radio Ina.fr". Archived from the original on 3 May 2018. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Profile, ina.fr; accessed 30 March 2015.(in French)
- ^ "Celebrating Daniel Balavoine". Google. 1 June 2021.