Fredericks Goldman Jones (album)

Fredericks Goldman Jones is a 1990 album recorded by the trio Fredericks Goldman Jones. It was the trio's first studio album and was recorded at the studios ICP and Guillaume Tell, in Paris. The album was released on 28 November 1990 and spawned six singles which achieved success in France : "Nuit" (#6), "À nos actes manqués" (#2), "Né en 17 à Leidenstadt" (#11), "C'est pas l'amour" (#11), "Un, deux, trois" (#8) and "Tu manques" (#12). The album itself was successful : it debuted at number one on 4 January 1991 and stayed there for eight consecutive weeks. It was ranked for 51 weeks in the top ten and 87 weeks in the top 50.[2] In 1991, it earned a Diamond disc for over 1,000,000 copies sold.[3]

Fredericks Goldman Jones
Studio album by
Released28 November 1990
Recorded1990
  • Studio ICP
  • Studio Guillaume Tell
GenreSynthpop, pop rock
LabelCBS Disques
Fredericks Goldman Jones chronology
Fredericks Goldman Jones
(1990)
Sur scène
(1992)
Jean-Jacques Goldman chronology
Traces
(1989)
Fredericks Goldman Jones
(1990)
Sur scène
(1992)
Singles from Fredericks Goldman Jones
  1. "Nuit"
    Released: 1990
  2. "À nos actes manqués"
    Released: 1991
  3. "Né en 17 à Leidenstadt"
    Released: 1991
  4. "C'est pas l'amour"
    Released: 1991
  5. "Un, deux, trois"
    Released: 1991
  6. "Tu manques"
    Released: 1992
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listings

All tracks written and composed by Jean-Jacques Goldman.
All tracks performed by Carole Fredericks, Jean-Jacques Goldman and Michael Jones, except "Tu manques" (Goldman only).

  1. "C'est pas d'l'amour" — 4:57
  2. "Vivre cent vies" — 4:41
  3. "Né en 17 à Leidenstadt" — 3:54
  4. "Un, deux, trois" — 4:18
  5. "Nuit" — 5:40
  6. "Je l'aime aussi" — 6:14
  7. "Chanson d'amour (...!)" — 4:07
  8. "À nos actes manqués" — 4:42
  9. "Peurs" — 4:58
  10. "Tu manques" — 9:13

Source : Allmusic.[4]

Personnel

  • Nicole Amovin, Carole Fredericks, Julia Fenere Sarr – choir, chorus
  • Gildas Arzelacoustic guitar, guitar
  • Alain Aubert, John Hastry – engineer, mixing
  • Georges Baux, Jean Louis Pujade, Andy Scottproducer
  • Erick Benzisynthesizer, keyboards, producer
  • Simon Clarke, Kick Horns, Roddy Lorimer, J. Neil Sidwell – brass
  • Jean Yves d'Angelo – piano
  • Claude Gassian – photo
  • Jean-Jacques Goldman – guitar, harmonica, piano, arranger, choir, chorus, producer
  • Michael Jones – guitar, electric guitar, choir, chorus, co-arranger
  • Basil Leroux, Patrice Tison – guitar
  • Pino Palladino – bass
  • Gerald Manceau, Claude Salmieri – drums
  • Tim Sanders – sax, brass
  • Paul Spong – trumpet, brass

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
France (SNEP)[3] Diamond 1,000,000*
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[5] Platinum 50,000^

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

gollark: Interestingly enough, here in the UK™, COVID-19 means general GCSE exams were cancelled, but they still want to give everyone grades without having to have summer/aütumn exæms, so they're basically just going to be guessing the grade you might have gotten.
gollark: And how well everyone else did, and stuff like the total marks on the exam.
gollark: In that case % is betttererrer.
gollark: Grades let you distance, well, grades, from actual % results on stuff.
gollark: Of course, *that* means that how good you're considered depends on how well everyone else does. Although that probably would have been the case to some extent anyway.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. "Chart runs of albums in France". Infodisc. Archived from the original on 2012-06-22. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  3. "French album certifications – FredericksGoldmanJones" (in French). InfoDisc. Select FREDERICKSGOLDMANJONES and click OK. 
  4. "Fredericks Goldman Jones, track listing, credits and release history". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  5. "The Official Swiss Charts and Music Community: Awards (Fredericks Goldman Jones; 'Fredericks Goldman Jones')". IFPI Switzerland. Hung Medien. Retrieved 3 February 2019.
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