Yves Simon (singer)

Last updated

Yves Simon
Yves Simon 1974.jpg
Yves Simon in 1974
Born(1944-05-03)3 May 1944
Choiseul, Haute-Marne, France
Occupation(s)Singer, writer
Years active1967–

Yves Simon (born 3 May 1944 in Choiseul, Haute-Marne) is a French singer and writer. Simon has published over 30 books and released about twenty albums.

Contents

Biography

Simon was born in 1944, in the old clergy house of Choiseul, France. His father was a rail worker in Contrexéville, and his mother was a waitress, and later a nurse. His parents gave him a diatonic accordion when he was eight years old. As a teen, he was the guitarist of a band based in Nancy, called "Korrigans nancéens".[ citation needed ]

In a television interview, he recalled having been fascinated at the age of 16 by the singer Salvatore Adamo, who has at the age of 17 just won the final of a competition and realised his dream of becoming a writer and singer. [1]

He went to school in Mirecourt [2] and, after having passed his baccalauréat, he enrolled at the faculté de lettres in Nancy. He then moved to Paris where he enrolled in university and in a preparatory class at the lycée Voltaire to gain a place at the IDHEC. After gaining his BA, he left Paris to explore Europe and the United States. [3]

Career

In 1967, he recorded three singles (Ne t'en fais pas petite fille,T'as pas changé tu sais, and Ne t'en fais pas petite fille). In 1969, he recorded La Planète endormie. These recording remained relatively little-known, despite the success of Ne t'en fais pas petite fille.

At the same time as this, he wrote several novels. In 1971, he published En couleur and L'homme arc-en-ciel, which were met with success. He also worked for the magazine Actuel and for the radio station Europe 1.

Simon came to wide attention in 1972 with the release of Les Gauloises Bleues. After this, he was booked as the opening act for major artists such as Georges Brassens. His 1973 album, Au pays des merveilles de Juliet, won the prestigious 'Grand Prix de l'Académie du disque'. Respirer chanter was a success in 1974.

He retired from live concerts in 1977, but continued to release successful albums displaying a wide range of musical influences. In 1977, his soundtrack to Diane Kurys's film Diabolo Menthe was well received. His album USA-USSR (1983) met with success, and Liaisons was a hit in 1988. He also made some live concert appearances in Japan in 1982 and in France in 2007.

Simon's first best-selling novel was Océans in 1983. In 1991, Simon won the Prix Médicis, for his novel La Dérive des sentiments. His novel Le Prochain amour (1997) became successful, and a short story collection, Un instant de bonheur, published in 1998, won the 'Grand Prix de la chanson de l'Académie française'.

In his later career, Simon continued to compose music, but at a less regular rate, preferring to devote more time to his writing. In 1999 he released Intempestives, produced with Michel Cœuriot. The album is characterised by orchestral arrangements, and a mixture of rock, classical, and Arabian influences. His lyrics also became more engaged with real world events. He told the story of Afghan women imprisoned by the Taliban in Kabul in Les Souffrantes and defended the criminal Florence Rey in Pardonnez. He described life in the banlieues in Des cités des pleurs, speaks of dialogue between the East and the West. Other songs are more personal, such as Je te prie d'oublier. Je me souviens is an hommage to Georges Perec.

In 2007, he released Rumeurs. In July 2007, he reappeared on the live music scene after 30 years of absence at Francofolies de La Rochelle, and then at Spa.

On 12 March 2008, he played at the Olympia, giving a concert of more than two hours, mainly made up of the songs on his most recent album but also including classics such as Amazoniaque, J’ai rêvé New York, Diabolo menthe and Au pays des merveilles de Juliet. He paid homage to his influences: Georges Brassens, Serge Gainsbourg, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones and The Beatles. Serge Perathoner, his longtime collaborator, played the piano and the keyboard.

In 2011 he was one of the members of the jury for the Prix Françoise Sagan.

In 2014, Christine and the Queens covered his song Amazoniaque and sent Simon a copy. He played it to the head of Because Music, who proposed that he made an album of covers. [4] In 2018 he released Génération(s) éperdue(s), a double album made up in part of his concert at the Olympia, and finished by his covers of the biggest hot songs of the new generation: Christine and the Queens, Woodkid, Clou, Flavien Berger, SoKo, Moodoid, Juliette Armanet, Lilly Wood and the Prick, Radio Elvis. [4]

Private life

He was in a relationship with comedian Pascale Rocard, before until 2015 being with painter, photographer and actress Patrice-Flora Praxo, to whom he devoted the songs La Métisse and Patrice on his album Rumeurs.

Discography

Studio albums

*Note – Simon considers Rumeurs to be his twelfth album, and therefore only counts his discography as beginning in 1973. [5]

Live albums

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jean Yanne</span> French actor, screenwriter, producer, director and composer

Jean Yanne was a French actor, screenwriter, producer, director and composer. In 1972, he won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film We Won't Grow Old Together.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gilles Vigneault</span> Canadian poet and singer-songwriter (born 1928)

Gilles Vigneault is a Canadian poet, publisher, singer-songwriter, and Quebec nationalist and sovereigntist. Two of his songs are considered by many to be Quebec's unofficial anthems: "Mon pays" and "Gens du pays", and his line Mon pays ce n'est pas un pays, c'est l'hiver became a proverb in Quebec. Vigneault is a Grand Officer of the National Order of Quebec, Knight of the Legion of Honour, and Officer of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claude-Henri de Fusée de Voisenon</span>

Claude-Henri de Fusée, abbé de Voisenon was a French playwright and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Debout sur le Zinc</span>

Debout Sur Le Zinc is a French music band.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Enrico Macias</span> Algerian-French singer-songwriter and musician

Gaston Ghrenassia , known by his stage name Enrico Macias, is a French singer, songwriter and musician of Algerian Jewish descent.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fabrice Luchini</span> French stage and film actor (born 1951)

Fabrice Luchini is a French stage and film actor. He has appeared in films such as Potiche, The Women on the 6th Floor, and In the House.

William Sheller is a French classical composer and singer-songwriter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maurane</span> Musical artist

Claudine Luypaerts, better known as Maurane, was a Francophone Belgian singer and actress.

The Prix Sorcières is an annual literary prize awarded in France since 1986 to works of children's literature in a number of categories. The categories were renamed in 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olivier Adam</span> French author and screenwriter

Olivier Adam is a French author and screenwriter. His debut novel Je vais bien, ne t’en fais pas was adapted into the eponym film. He also writes books for young adults, among them La messe anniversaire. Adam won the 2004 Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle for Passer l'hiver.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julien Boisselier</span> French actor (b. 1970)

Julien Boisselier is a French actor.

<i>Hollywood</i> (Johnny Hallyday album) 1979 studio album by Johnny Hallyday

Hollywood is an album of the French singer Johnny Hallyday album. It was recorded and mixed by Robert Margouleff.

Salut les copains is a series of albums released through Universal Music France to commemorate the best of music featured in French scene as sponsored by the "Salut les copains" radio program in France and the French Salut les copains magazine. The tracks include French original singles, French-language covers of known hits as well as European and American hits popular in France. The track list is a representative wide selection of the "Yé-yé" generation of French music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Françoise Bujold</span>

Françoise Bujold was a Quebec writer and artist. She is considered by some to be the first major poet of the Gaspé region.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Daniel DeShaime</span> Musical artist

Daniel DeShaime is a Canadian French-language singer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Summer Tour 2016</span> 2016 concert tour by Celine Dion

The Summer Tour 2016 was the eleventh concert tour by Canadian singer Celine Dion. It was organized to support Dion's fifteenth French-language and twenty-sixth studio album, Encore un soir (2016), released on 26 August 2016. It was Dion's first tour since the Sans attendre Tour in 2013. With 28 shows, it was also her biggest Francophone tour since the D'eux Tour in 1995–96. The show began in Antwerp, Belgium on 20 June 2016 and concluded on 31 August 2016 in Trois-Rivières, Québec. The Summer Tour 2016 grossed $56 million.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Simon Liberati</span> French writer and journalist

Simon Liberati is a French writer and journalist. For his novels, he has received the Prix de Flore (2009), Prix Femina (2011) and Prix Renaudot (2022).

Vincent Baguian, born Vincent Pambaguian, 21 October 1962 in Saint-Ouen, is a French singer of Armenian origin.

Gaspard Hons was a Belgian poet.

References

  1. Story told by Simon to Adamo on the show "Tous vos amis sont là" on RTBF, on 27 March 2011.
  2. "Rencontre avec Yves Simon". YouTube .
  3. Simon, Yves (2003). La manufacture des rêves. Grasset. p. 21.
  4. 1 2 "" Au pays des merveilles de Juliette Armanet et d'Yves Simon "". Le Monde.fr. 27 April 2018.
  5. "Yves Simon, chanteur éditorialiste". Le Monde.fr. 3 October 2007.