La maison où j'ai grandi (album)
La maison où j'ai grandi is a studio album of French pop singer Françoise Hardy. It was released in France in November 1966, on LP, Disques Vogue/Vogue international industries (CLD 702-30). Published without title, except for the word Françoise on the cover, but has become known by the title of the most successful song on the album, "La maison où j'ai grandi" ("The House where I Grew Up").
La maison où j'ai grandi | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 1966 (France) | |||
Studio | Studio Pye London, United Kingdom | |||
Genre | French pop | |||
Length | 29:45 | |||
Language | French | |||
Label | Disques Vogue | |||
Producer | Claude Wolfsohn | |||
Françoise Hardy chronology | ||||
|
Track listing
Words and music were written by Françoise Hardy, except where noted. She is accompanied by the Johnny Harris orchestra.[1]
- "Je changerais d’avis" – 2:53
Original title: "Se telefonando"
Lyrics: Ghigo De Chiara, Maurizio Costanzo
Music written by: Ennio Morricone
First sung by: Mina, 1966
French adaptation by: Jacques Lanzmann and Françoise Hardy - "Si c’est ça" – 2:09
- "Rendez-vous d’automne" – 2:40
Lyrics: Jean-Max Rivière
Music written by: Gérard Bourgeois
Accompanists: Charles Blackwell orchestra. - "Je serai là pour toi" – 2:24
- "Peut-être que je t’aime" – 2:12
- "Il est des choses" – 2:31
Original title: "Ci sono cose più grandi"
Lyrics: Eliana de Sabata
Music written by: Edoardo Vianello
First sung by: Tony Renis, 1966
French adaptation by: Françoise Hardy
Accompanists: Charles Blackwell orchestra. - "Comme" – 1:54
- "Mes jours s’en vont" – 2:26
- "Qu’ils sont heureux" – 2:21
Lyrics: Eddy Marnay
Music written by: André Popp - "Surtout ne vous retournez pas" – 2:20
- "Tu es un peu à moi" – 2:14
- "La maison où j'ai grandi" – 3:39
Original title: "Il ragazzo della via Gluck"
Lyrics: Luciano Beretta and Michele "Miki" Del Prete
Music written by: Adriano Celentano
First sung by: Adriano Celentano, 1966
French adaptation: Eddy Marnay
Accompanists: Charles Blackwell orchestra.
LP records: first editions in English-speaking world
South Africa, 1966: LP, Vogue (VGL 7022). United Kingdom, 1966: LP, Vogue/Vogue international industries (VRL 3028). Australia, 1968: Vogue (SVL 933.540). Canada, 1968: La maison où j'ai grandi, Vogue/Vogue international industries (VC 6024). New Zealand, 1968: Vogue (SVL 933-540).
Reissues on CD
France, 1996: Disques Vogue/Sony BMG (7 43213 80052 3). United States, October 16, 2015: CD, La maison où j'ai grandi, Light in the Attic Records/Future Days Recordings (FDR 618).
Reissue on 180g Vinyl
United States, January 2016: La maison où j'ai grandi, Light in the Attic Records/Future Days Recordings (FDR 618).
Notes and references
- Maison Ou J'ai Grandi – overview, Allmusic. Accessed on line May 1, 2009.
gollark: They are sciency-sounding words which turn up a lot but have somewhat complex definitions.
gollark: I mean, in an extreme edge case, what if there's only one person in the entire universe, they punch a wall, and randomly die for unrelated reasons? How is that going to cause more violence down the line?
gollark: That's not some sort of universal truth, just a rough heuristic which is somewhat accurate.
gollark: I mean, those apply to some narrowly defined things in physics, for limited definitions of "action" and such, but not in general so far as I can tell.
gollark: I don't think so, unless you really stretch the definition most of the time or claim it's metaphorical or something.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.