fbpx
Wikipedia

Léo Ferré

Léo Ferré (24 August 1916 – 14 July 1993) was a French-born Monégasque poet and composer, and a dynamic and controversial live performer, whose career in France dominated the years after the Second World War until his death. He released some forty albums over this period, composing the music and the majority of the lyrics. He released many hit singles, particularly between 1960 and the mid-seventies. Some of his songs have become classics of the French chanson repertoire, including "Avec le temps", "C'est extra", "Jolie Môme" and "Paris canaille".

Léo Ferré
Léo Ferré at the Fest of Unified Socialist Party, Colombes (France), 1973
Background information
Born(1916-08-24)24 August 1916
Monaco
Died14 July 1993(1993-07-14) (aged 76)
Castellina in Chianti, Italy
GenresChanson, expressionist, classical, spoken word, pop
Occupation(s)Musician, singer-songwriter, composer, conductor
Instrument(s)Piano, vocals
Years active1946–1991
LabelsLe Chant du Monde, Odeon, Barclay, CBS, RCA, EPM, La Mémoire et la Mer
Websitewww.leo-ferre.com

Early life

Son of Joseph Ferré, French staff manager at Monte-Carlo Casino, and Marie Scotto, a Monégasque dressmaker of Italian descent from Piedmont,[1] he had a sister, Lucienne, two years older.

Léo Ferré had an early interest in music. At the age of seven, he joined the choir of the Monaco Cathedral and discovered polyphony through singing pieces by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and Tomás Luis de Victoria. His uncle, former violinist and secretary at the Casino, used to bring him to performances and rehearsals at the Monte Carlo Opera. Ferré listened to such musicians as bass singer Feodor Chaliapin, discovered Beethoven under the baton of Arturo Toscanini (Coriolanus), was deeply moved by the Fifth Symphony. But it is the sweet presence of composer Maurice Ravel during L'Enfant et les Sortilèges rehearsals that impressed him the most.[2]

At nine years of age he entered Saint-Charles College of Bordighera, run by the Brothers of the Christian Schools in Italy. He remained there for eight long years of severe discipline and boredom.[3] He wrote about this lonely and caged childhood in an autofiction (Benoît Misère, 1970).

He graduated from high school at Monaco, but his father did not let him attend the Conservatory of Music.[3]

Career

In 1945, while still a "farmer" and a Jack-of-all-trades at Radio Monte-Carlo, Ferré met Edith Piaf, who encouraged him to try his luck in Paris.[3]

In April 1947, Ferré agreed to tour in Martinique, which turned out to be disastrous.[3] From the end of 1947 Ferré produced and hosted on Paris Inter station several cycles of programs devoted to classical music. In Musique Byzantine (1953–54), he expanded his topics on aesthetics, such as tonality necessity, exotic melody, opera (the "song of rich people"), boredom, and originality or "marshmallow music".[4]

In 1952, to submit Verdi examination at La Scala in Milan, he wrote the libretto and music of an opera called La Vie d'artiste (same title as the song). It transposed his past years' experience into a kind of a black comedy but Ferré did not seem to like it much, finally abandoning it for other projects.[5] He began to sing in larger venues such as l'Olympia, as the opening act of Josephine Baker in 1954.[3] In 1956, Ferré wrote and composed La Nuit (The Night), a ballet with sung sections commissioned by choreographer Roland Petit. It was a violent flop.[3]

From 1960 to 1970, Ferré worked with arranger Jean-Michel Defaye, whose classical skills and taste accorded well with Ferré's musical sensitivity. They maintained a steady pace of creation, realizing almost an album a year, sometimes more. This artistic output, including the way Ferré would write for symphonic orchestras after 1970, would have an influence in the English-speaking world over such singer-songwriters as Scott Walker,[6] Martin Newell[7] or Benjamin Clementine.[8]

In March 1968, Ferré did not return at home after a gig. In his absence, Ferré's chimpanzee Pépée suffered a fall and refused to be approached. Eventually, Madeleine asked a hunter neighbour to put the chimpanzee out of its misery. Ferré's requiem for the primate would be his eponymous song "Pépée". The singer blamed his wife for Pépée's death and they would divorce after endless procedures.[9][10]

In 1969, Ferré settled in Tuscany, in Italy. The huge success of "C'est extra", an erotic ballad, greatly expanded his audience, especially among the French youth, who recognized in the poet the "prophet" of his own rebellion.[3] Backed by this new energy, Ferré began to smash traditional song structures to explore spoken word and long monologues. With a very precise work on the voice (rhythm, speech) and rhetorical writing derived from the prose of poet Arthur Rimbaud, Ferré ritualized his speaking in an incantatory and dramatic fashion.[11]

In 1975 Ferré conducted successively Orchestra of the Institut des Hautes Études Musicales in Montreux, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Liège, and the Pasdeloup Orchestra at the Palais des congrès de Paris. It was a perilous challenge for Ferré, who conducted the orchestra and sang at the same time. He mixed Ravel and Beethoven with his own compositions and reversed the placement of the orchestra. 140 musicians and choir singers were on stage. This was an unprecedented performance, breaking free from conventions and blending separated worlds. Concerts were sold out for five weeks, but critics from the classical music field rejected this hybrid show.[3]

From 1976 to 1979 he toured less. He drifted from his violently declamatory expression of revolt to avoid being typecast.[12]

In 1976, Ferré signed with CBS Records International. From then until the end of his career the majority of his recordings would be made with the Milan-based RAI National Symphony Orchestra under his conducting.[13] CBS soon dropped Ferré, whose commercial potential was estimated too low (his new aesthetics of symphonic down-tempo being against the current of all musical trends, it was complicated to put the artist on the radio and reduced the possibility of a hit). Being dropped by the "professionals", and disgusted for good with being "a merchandise for producers",[14] Ferré refused to accept French song prizes.[15] He also refused the proposal to enter the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (at the highest grade) and to support President of France François Mitterrand in his reelection campaign in exchange for leading and conducting of a first-class symphonic orchestra. He refused being guest of honor in the Victoires de la musique (Music's Victories),[16] annual French award ceremony recognizing the best musical artists of the year. Ferré used to say: "The only honor for an artist is not getting any".[17]

Léo Ferré died at his home in July 1993 at the age of 76. He was buried at the Monaco Cemetery.[18]

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

  • 1955: Récital Léo Ferré à l'Olympia
  • 1958: Léo Ferré à Bobino
  • 1961: Récital Léo Ferré à l'Alhambra
  • 1963: Flash ! Alhambra – A.B.C.
  • 1969: Récital 1969 en public à Bobino (2×LP)
  • 1973: Seul en scène (Olympia 1972) (2×LP)
  • 1984: Léo Ferré au Théâtre des Champs-Élysées (3×LP)
  • 1988: Léo Ferré en public au TLP Déjazet

Posthumous releases

  • 1993: Alors, Léo... (live at the TLP Déjazet 1990, 2xCD)
  • 2000: Métamec (unreleased album demo tapes)
  • 2000: Le Temps des roses rouges (78s songs from 1950)
  • 2001: Sur la scène... (live at Lausanne 1973, 2×CD)
  • 2001: Un chien à Montreux (live at Montreux 1973, EP)
  • 2003: Les Chansons interdites… et autres (songs from 1961)
  • 2004: De sac et de cordes (radio drama from 1951)
  • 2004: Maudits soient-ils ! (Verlaine et Rimbaud album demo tapes, 2×CD)
  • 2006: La Mauvaise Graine (radio sessions & interviews from 1959)
  • 2008: Les Fleurs du mal (suite et fin) (unreleased album demo tapes, 1976–77)
  • 2018: Je parle à n'importe qui (unreleased album demo tape, 1977)

Boxed sets, compilations, and rarities

  • 2013: L'Indigné (20xCD)
  • 2018: La Vie moderne: intégrale 1944-1959 (14CD covering the 15 first artist's years)
  • 2020: L'Âge d'or: intégrale 1960-1967 (16CD covering the next eight artist's years)
  • 2021: La Solitude: intégrale 1968-1974 (18CD covering the next seven artist's years)

See also

References

  1. ^ Vassal, Jacques (2013). Léo Ferré, la voix sans maître. Paris: Le Cherche midi. p. 17. ISBN 978-2-7491-2833-7.
  2. ^ Interview with Michel Lancelot, La Mémoire courte (Europe 1), 1969.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h . RFI Musique. November 2000. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  4. ^ Léo Ferré, "La musique souvent me prend... comme l'amour", La Mémoire et la mer, 1999, p. 91.
  5. ^ Quentin Dupont, "Vous savez qui je suis, maintenant?", La Mémoire et la mer, 2003, p. 421.
  6. ^ Young, Rob (2013). Scott: The Collection 1967–1970, Universal.
  7. ^ Newell's musician Louis Philippe says on his website they went for the Léo Ferré treatment in the string arrangements of a song such as "Arcadian Boys", from The Off-White Album (1995), since Ferré is one of Newell's favourite singers.
  8. ^ Godwin, Richard (6 December 2013). "Benjamin Clementine: the future sound of London". London Evening Standard.
  9. ^ Samuel, Henry (24 May 2013). "Tyrannical chimp ruins childhood". The Age.
  10. ^ "Dangerous Exotic Pets: Primates". Humane Society.
  11. ^ Céline Chabot-Canet, Léo Ferré : Une voix et un phrasé emblématiques, L'Harmattan, 2008.
  12. ^ "I think the revolt is no longer appropriate. Revolt is a way of getting into the City. This is a tribal virtue (...)." "Technique de l'exil" ("The Exile Technique"), in La Mauvaise graine, Édition N° 1, 1993.
  13. ^ For contractual reasons, the orchestra would be named Orchestre symphonique de Milan on record sleeves.
  14. ^ Interview with La Nouvelle République du Centre-Ouest newspaper, 5 June 1979.
  15. ^ Interview with Jean-Louis Foulquier, Pollen (France Inter), 1987.
  16. ^ Robert Belleret, Léo Ferré, une vie d'artiste: ninth part, chapter "Je te donne ces vers...", Actes Sud, 1996.
  17. ^ Interview Pierre Bouteiller, France 3, August 1984.
  18. ^ "Visite funéraire de Monaco". Amis et Passionés du Père-Lachaise. Retrieved 26 December 2015.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Vinyl discography (in French)
  • Recording of the unique interview with Georges Brassens and Jacques Brel, 6 January 1969 (in French)
  • – a gallery of places and people in Ferré's life (in French)

léo, ferré, august, 1916, july, 1993, french, born, monégasque, poet, composer, dynamic, controversial, live, performer, whose, career, france, dominated, years, after, second, world, until, death, released, some, forty, albums, over, this, period, composing, . Leo Ferre 24 August 1916 14 July 1993 was a French born Monegasque poet and composer and a dynamic and controversial live performer whose career in France dominated the years after the Second World War until his death He released some forty albums over this period composing the music and the majority of the lyrics He released many hit singles particularly between 1960 and the mid seventies Some of his songs have become classics of the French chanson repertoire including Avec le temps C est extra Jolie Mome and Paris canaille Leo FerreLeo Ferre at the Fest of Unified Socialist Party Colombes France 1973Background informationBorn 1916 08 24 24 August 1916MonacoDied14 July 1993 1993 07 14 aged 76 Castellina in Chianti ItalyGenresChanson expressionist classical spoken word popOccupation s Musician singer songwriter composer conductorInstrument s Piano vocalsYears active1946 1991LabelsLe Chant du Monde Odeon Barclay CBS RCA EPM La Memoire et la MerWebsitewww wbr leo ferre wbr com Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Discography 3 1 Studio albums 3 2 Live albums 3 3 Posthumous releases 3 4 Boxed sets compilations and rarities 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditSon of Joseph Ferre French staff manager at Monte Carlo Casino and Marie Scotto a Monegasque dressmaker of Italian descent from Piedmont 1 he had a sister Lucienne two years older Leo Ferre had an early interest in music At the age of seven he joined the choir of the Monaco Cathedral and discovered polyphony through singing pieces by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and Tomas Luis de Victoria His uncle former violinist and secretary at the Casino used to bring him to performances and rehearsals at the Monte Carlo Opera Ferre listened to such musicians as bass singer Feodor Chaliapin discovered Beethoven under the baton of Arturo Toscanini Coriolanus was deeply moved by the Fifth Symphony But it is the sweet presence of composer Maurice Ravel during L Enfant et les Sortileges rehearsals that impressed him the most 2 At nine years of age he entered Saint Charles College of Bordighera run by the Brothers of the Christian Schools in Italy He remained there for eight long years of severe discipline and boredom 3 He wrote about this lonely and caged childhood in an autofiction Benoit Misere 1970 He graduated from high school at Monaco but his father did not let him attend the Conservatory of Music 3 Career EditIn 1945 while still a farmer and a Jack of all trades at Radio Monte Carlo Ferre met Edith Piaf who encouraged him to try his luck in Paris 3 In April 1947 Ferre agreed to tour in Martinique which turned out to be disastrous 3 From the end of 1947 Ferre produced and hosted on Paris Inter station several cycles of programs devoted to classical music In Musique Byzantine 1953 54 he expanded his topics on aesthetics such as tonality necessity exotic melody opera the song of rich people boredom and originality or marshmallow music 4 In 1952 to submit Verdi examination at La Scala in Milan he wrote the libretto and music of an opera called La Vie d artiste same title as the song It transposed his past years experience into a kind of a black comedy but Ferre did not seem to like it much finally abandoning it for other projects 5 He began to sing in larger venues such as l Olympia as the opening act of Josephine Baker in 1954 3 In 1956 Ferre wrote and composed La Nuit The Night a ballet with sung sections commissioned by choreographer Roland Petit It was a violent flop 3 From 1960 to 1970 Ferre worked with arranger Jean Michel Defaye whose classical skills and taste accorded well with Ferre s musical sensitivity They maintained a steady pace of creation realizing almost an album a year sometimes more This artistic output including the way Ferre would write for symphonic orchestras after 1970 would have an influence in the English speaking world over such singer songwriters as Scott Walker 6 Martin Newell 7 or Benjamin Clementine 8 In March 1968 Ferre did not return at home after a gig In his absence Ferre s chimpanzee Pepee suffered a fall and refused to be approached Eventually Madeleine asked a hunter neighbour to put the chimpanzee out of its misery Ferre s requiem for the primate would be his eponymous song Pepee The singer blamed his wife for Pepee s death and they would divorce after endless procedures 9 10 In 1969 Ferre settled in Tuscany in Italy The huge success of C est extra an erotic ballad greatly expanded his audience especially among the French youth who recognized in the poet the prophet of his own rebellion 3 Backed by this new energy Ferre began to smash traditional song structures to explore spoken word and long monologues With a very precise work on the voice rhythm speech and rhetorical writing derived from the prose of poet Arthur Rimbaud Ferre ritualized his speaking in an incantatory and dramatic fashion 11 In 1975 Ferre conducted successively Orchestra of the Institut des Hautes Etudes Musicales in Montreux the Orchestre Philharmonique de Liege and the Pasdeloup Orchestra at the Palais des congres de Paris It was a perilous challenge for Ferre who conducted the orchestra and sang at the same time He mixed Ravel and Beethoven with his own compositions and reversed the placement of the orchestra 140 musicians and choir singers were on stage This was an unprecedented performance breaking free from conventions and blending separated worlds Concerts were sold out for five weeks but critics from the classical music field rejected this hybrid show 3 From 1976 to 1979 he toured less He drifted from his violently declamatory expression of revolt to avoid being typecast 12 In 1976 Ferre signed with CBS Records International From then until the end of his career the majority of his recordings would be made with the Milan based RAI National Symphony Orchestra under his conducting 13 CBS soon dropped Ferre whose commercial potential was estimated too low his new aesthetics of symphonic down tempo being against the current of all musical trends it was complicated to put the artist on the radio and reduced the possibility of a hit Being dropped by the professionals and disgusted for good with being a merchandise for producers 14 Ferre refused to accept French song prizes 15 He also refused the proposal to enter the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres at the highest grade and to support President of France Francois Mitterrand in his reelection campaign in exchange for leading and conducting of a first class symphonic orchestra He refused being guest of honor in the Victoires de la musique Music s Victories 16 annual French award ceremony recognizing the best musical artists of the year Ferre used to say The only honor for an artist is not getting any 17 Leo Ferre died at his home in July 1993 at the age of 76 He was buried at the Monaco Cemetery 18 Discography EditStudio albums Edit 1953 Paris canaille 1954 Chansons de Leo Ferre 1954 Le Piano du pauvre 1956 Le Guinche Huit Chansons nouvelles 1956 Poete vos papiers 1957 Les Fleurs du mal 1957 La Chanson du mal aime 1958 Encore du Leo Ferre 1960 Paname 1961 Les Chansons d Aragon 1962 La Langue francaise 1964 Ferre 64 1964 Verlaine et Rimbaud 2 LP 1966 Leo Ferre 1916 19 1967 Cette chanson La Marseillaise 1967 Leo Ferre chante Baudelaire 2 LP 1969 L Ete 68 1969 Les Douze Premieres Chansons de Leo Ferre 1970 Amour Anarchie 2 LP 1971 La Solitude 1972 La Chanson du mal aime 1972 La Solitudine 1973 Il n y a plus rien 1973 Et basta 1974 L Espoir 1975 Ferre muet dirige 1976 Je te donne 1977 La musica mi prende come l amore 1977 La Frime 1979 Il est six heures ici et midi a New York 1980 La Violence et l Ennui 1982 Ludwig L imaginaire Le bateau ivre 3 LP 1983 L Opera du pauvre 4 LP 1985 Les Loubards 1986 On n est pas serieux quand on a dix sept ans 2 LP 1990 Les Vieux Copains 1991 Une saison en enfer Live albums Edit 1955 Recital Leo Ferre a l Olympia 1958 Leo Ferre a Bobino 1961 Recital Leo Ferre a l Alhambra 1963 Flash Alhambra A B C 1969 Recital 1969 en public a Bobino 2 LP 1973 Seul en scene Olympia 1972 2 LP 1984 Leo Ferre au Theatre des Champs Elysees 3 LP 1988 Leo Ferre en public au TLP DejazetPosthumous releases Edit 1993 Alors Leo live at the TLP Dejazet 1990 2xCD 2000 Metamec unreleased album demo tapes 2000 Le Temps des roses rouges 78s songs from 1950 2001 Sur la scene live at Lausanne 1973 2 CD 2001 Un chien a Montreux live at Montreux 1973 EP 2003 Les Chansons interdites et autres songs from 1961 2004 De sac et de cordes radio drama from 1951 2004 Maudits soient ils Verlaine et Rimbaud album demo tapes 2 CD 2006 La Mauvaise Graine radio sessions amp interviews from 1959 2008 Les Fleurs du mal suite et fin unreleased album demo tapes 1976 77 2018 Je parle a n importe qui unreleased album demo tape 1977 Boxed sets compilations and rarities Edit 2013 L Indigne 20xCD 2018 La Vie moderne integrale 1944 1959 14CD covering the 15 first artist s years 2020 L Age d or integrale 1960 1967 16CD covering the next eight artist s years 2021 La Solitude integrale 1968 1974 18CD covering the next seven artist s years See also Edit L Affiche Rouge poem References Edit Vassal Jacques 2013 Leo Ferre la voix sans maitre Paris Le Cherche midi p 17 ISBN 978 2 7491 2833 7 Interview with Michel Lancelot La Memoire courte Europe 1 1969 a b c d e f g h Leo Ferre RFI Musique November 2000 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 28 November 2013 Leo Ferre La musique souvent me prend comme l amour La Memoire et la mer 1999 p 91 Quentin Dupont Vous savez qui je suis maintenant La Memoire et la mer 2003 p 421 Young Rob 2013 Scott The Collection 1967 1970 Universal Newell s musician Louis Philippe says on his website they went for the Leo Ferre treatment in the string arrangements of a song such as Arcadian Boys from The Off White Album 1995 since Ferre is one of Newell s favourite singers Godwin Richard 6 December 2013 Benjamin Clementine the future sound of London London Evening Standard Samuel Henry 24 May 2013 Tyrannical chimp ruins childhood The Age Dangerous Exotic Pets Primates Humane Society Celine Chabot Canet Leo Ferre Une voix et un phrase emblematiques L Harmattan 2008 I think the revolt is no longer appropriate Revolt is a way of getting into the City This is a tribal virtue Technique de l exil The Exile Technique in La Mauvaise graine Edition N 1 1993 For contractual reasons the orchestra would be named Orchestre symphonique de Milan on record sleeves Interview with La Nouvelle Republique du Centre Ouest newspaper 5 June 1979 Interview with Jean Louis Foulquier Pollen France Inter 1987 Robert Belleret Leo Ferre une vie d artiste ninth part chapter Je te donne ces vers Actes Sud 1996 Interview Pierre Bouteiller France 3 August 1984 Visite funeraire de Monaco Amis et Passiones du Pere Lachaise Retrieved 26 December 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leo Ferre Official website 25 songs of Leo Ferre translated into English complete lyrics Vinyl discography in French Recording of the unique interview with Georges Brassens and Jacques Brel 6 January 1969 in French Pays Ages de Leo Ferre a gallery of places and people in Ferre s life in French Portals France Music Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leo Ferre amp oldid 1089528937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.