Je t'aimais, je t'aime, je t'aimerai

"Je t'aimais, je t'aime, je t'aimerai" ("I have loved you, I love you and I will love you") is a well-known song by French singer and songwriter Francis Cabrel. It is considered his most definitive song, alongside his other classic "Je l'aime à mourir". The song was written by Cabrel and is taken from his 1994 album Samedi soir sur la terre, which was released in 1994 and is Cabrel's biggest selling album. The song was produced by Gérard Bikialo.

Covers

The song have been covered many times and translated into other languages. Recorded versions include those by France Gall, Iris Jenkins and Amandine Bourgeois.

In 2012, it was interpreted by Aude Henneville during her blind audition on the French music competition The Voice: la plus belle voix. Her version charted on SNEP, the French Singles Chart reaching number 91.[1]

In 2016, the French singer Axel Tony released his own version of the song.

In 2016, French Algerian singer Najim released a bilingual French-Arabic version.[2]

gollark: I mean making good use of the DNS packets, not CPU use on each end; I don't really care about that.
gollark: So you probably need checksums now and you use up even more of the packet size.
gollark: And you also need to be able to autodetect properties of the system of DNS servers between you and the authoritative one doing the actual bridging. But that might randomly change (e.g. if you switch network) and start messing up your data.
gollark: But you also want to be able to send data up efficiently, but you're probably using much of the limited space for user data which won't get munged by recursive DNS/proxies/whatever on the session token and whatever, so now you have to deal with *that*.
gollark: Possibly? You apply somewhere.

References

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