Les grands espaces

Les grands espaces is francophone Canadian pop singer Isabelle Boulay's eighth studio album, released in November 2011.

Les grands espaces
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 8, 2011
GenreCountry
Pop[1]
LabelAudiogram
ProducerBenjamin Biolay[1]
Isabelle Boulay chronology
Chansons pour les mois d'hiver
(2009)
Les grands espaces
(2011)
Merci Serge Reggiani
(2014)

Track listing

  1. "Fin octobre, début novembre" (written by Mario Leblanc) — 3:10
  2. "Souffrir par toi n'est pas souffrir" (lyrics by Étienne Roda-Gil, music by Julien Clerc) — 4:14
  3. "Jolie Louise" (written by Daniel Lanois) — 2:52
  4. "All I Want Is Love" (lyrics by Alyssa Bonagura, music by Ross Copperman) — 3:23
  5. "Voulez-vous l'amour?" (written by Benjamin Biolay) — 3:30
  6. "True Blue" (with Dolly Parton); written by Dolly Parton and James Newton Howard — 3:55
  7. "Mille après mille" (written by Gérald Joly) — 3:47
  8. "Les grands espaces" (written by Steve Marin) — 4:12
  9. "Voyager léger" (written by Hubert Mounier) — 2:33
  10. "Summer Wine" (with Benjamin Biolay); written by Lee Hazlewood — 4:46
  11. "To Know Him is to Love Him" (written by Phil Spector)— 3:07
  12. "Où va la chance?" (written by Phil Ochs, French adaptation by Eddy Marnay) — 3:10
  13. "Partir au loin" (lyrics by Eve Déziel, music by Michel Rivard)— 3:56
  14. "Amour aime aussi nous voir tomber" (written by J.-L. Bergheaud) — 4:51
  15. "At Last" (written by Harry Warren and Mack Gordon) — 3:30

This album was also released in a limited edition with three additional bonus tracks:[2]

  1. "Tout peut changer" — 4:11
  2. "O Marie" — 3:41
  3. "Crazy" — 4:10

Charts

Chart (2011) Peak
position
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[3] 16
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[4] 9
French Albums (SNEP)[5] 12
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[6] 69

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada)[7] Gold 40,000^

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

gollark: I mean, generally if the number goes down the density of the transistors goes up, but it's not an actual measurement of anything.
gollark: They don't correspond to any actual measurement now.
gollark: <@!221827050892296192> They used to actually be represent size of the transistors involved, but they no longer do, so the names are basically just, er, "generations" of process technology.
gollark: Don't think so.
gollark: (apart from some 1st gen ones apparently produced on 12nm for some reason? There are apparently a bunch of weird ones in the wild)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.