Amour toujours

Amour toujours is the second studio album by Belgian pop singer Lio and her third LP overall.

Amour toujours
Studio album by
Released1983
GenrePop
Chanson
Disco[1]
LabelAriola
Ze Records
ProducerAlain Chamfort
Lio chronology
Suite sixtine
(1982)
Amour toujours
(1983)
Pop model
(1986)
Singles from Amour toujours
  1. "Zip a doo wah"
    Released: 1983
  2. "La reine des pommes"
    Released: 1982
  3. "Tétéou (Lio featuring Jacky) (on 2005 re-release only)"
    Released: 1985
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Singles

Release
date
Single Chart
Position
1983 "Zip a doo wah"[3]
1983 "La reine des pommes"[4]
1983 "Tétéou" (Featuring Jacky)[5] #48 FRA

Release information and re-issues

The album was originally released by Ariola Records in 1983. It was re-released in France in 2005 as part of Ze Records's reissue of Lio's discography. This re-issue has four bonus tracks, including the extended version of the single "Zip a doo wah" and the standalone Top 50 hit "Tétéou".

Track listing

Original Album
No.TitleLength
1."La Reine des pommes" 
2."La Vérité toute nue" 
3."Zip a doo wah" 
4."Grenade" 
5."Trou de mémoire" 
6."Je voudrais bien me sentir mal" 
7."J'aime un fantome" 
8."Motus a la muette" 
9."Plus je t'embrasse" 
10."Je m'ennuie de toi" 
Bonus Tracks (on ZE Records 2005 re-release)[6]
No.TitleLength
1."Zip a doo wah (Long Version)" 
2."Noël" 
3."Por Quem Sonha Anamaria" 
4."Sleighride" 
5."Tétéou (featuring Jacky)" 

Personnel

  • Arranged by – Alain Chamfort (tracks: 15), Bruno Coulais (tracks: 1, 4, 6 to 8), Dan Lacksman (tracks: 9), John Sulznick (tracks: 9), Marc Moulin (tracks: 9, 15), Slim Pezin (tracks: 2, 3, 5, 10)
  • Artwork by [original art cover design] – Marc Borgers
  • Engineer – Ryan Ulyate
  • Mastered by [digitally remastered by] – Charlus de la Salle
  • Photography – Robert Doisneau
  • Programmed by [fairlight programming] – John Kongos
  • Supervised by [reissue co-ordinated & produced by] – Michel Esteban[7]
gollark: AMD and Intel CPUs have for some time been JITing x86 into internal RISC microcode.
gollark: Wrong. The ISA is old, but the microarchitectures of high-performant x86 CPUs are absolutely not ancient. They internally do a ton of optimization tricks to pretend to execute code in order with flat undifferentiated memory as fast as possible, even though the CPU is executing things out of order and aggressively caching and prefetching.
gollark: However, you can just not use it and will probably save a lot of time and segfaults.
gollark: Performant because it contorted the design of all modern CPUs to fit its model, useful because all the low-level APIs use it.
gollark: You will spend too much time on annoying memory things.

References

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