Le chanteur explained

Le chanteur
Type:studio
Artist:Daniel Balavoine
Cover:Daniel Balavoine Le chanteur album.jpg
Released:June 1978
Recorded:April 1978
Studio:Studio Damiens, Boulogne-Billancourt
Genre:Pop rock
Length:39:23
Label:
Producer:Andy Scott
Prev Title:Les aventures de Simon et Gunther...
Prev Year:1977
Next Title:Face amour / Face amère
Next Year:1979

Le chanteur is the third album by French singer Daniel Balavoine, released in June 1978 under Riviera-LM, a subsidiary of Barclay. The album was commercially successful, selling over 800 thousand copies.[1] [2]

Background and recording

Prior to Le chanteur, Balavoine had released two albums, De vous à elle en passant par moi and Les aventures de Simon et Gunther..., both of which had sold very poorly. Barclay founder Eddie Barclay expressed concerns over the future success of Balavoine; however, Léo Missir, the artistic director at Barclay, defended Balavoine and kept him at the label. Balavoine also decided that if he sold fewer than 30 thousand copies of his next album and fewer than 100 thousand copies of his next single, he would quit music.

Thanks to Missir, Balavoine returned to the studio in April 1978 to record his third album.[3] However, after several weeks, Missir visited the studio to listen to what had been produced, but found that a sufficiently strong enough song to mark the album was missing. Later, whilst playing a melody, which would become "Le chanteur", in the studio, one of the musicians played a harmony on the keyboard which was then recorded by mistake. These notes then inspired Balavoine to rewrite the introduction, giving the song its distinctive opening. Subsequently, one time whilst the rest of the musicians were at a restaurant next door to the studio, Balavoine stayed behind and wrote the lyrics to "Le chanteur" in an hour. The lyrics recount the life and career of a fictional singer and the song was initially titled "J'voudrais bien réussir ma vie", in reference to the song "Je m'voyais déjà" by Charles Aznavour, but was later changed to "Le chanteur".[4]

Release

Le chanteur was released at the beginning of June 1978. For the release of the album's first single, Barclay's sales team produced a promotional single with "Le chanteur" as the B-side and "Si je suis fou" as the A-side with the record company seeing "Si je suis fou" as being the more potentially successful. However, when the radio stations played "Le chanteur", the record company were surprised and were forced to place it as the A-side for the commercial release of the single.

Whilst both the album and the first single were released in June 1978, neither garnered success until after the release of album Starmania in September 1978, a cast recording for the rock opera of the same name in which Balavoine stars and sings. This album was hugely successful and went on to be certified diamond by the SNEP.[5]

The second single from Le chanteur was "Lucie" and was released in 1979. It featured the song "SOS d'un terrien en détresse" from Starmania as the B-side.

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Guignon . Jordane . 2016-01-14 . Que reste-t-il de Daniel Balavoine, mort il y a trente ans ? . 2024-04-07 . Grazia . fr-FR.
  2. Book: Rouault, Thierry . CAMION BLANC: DANIEL BALAVOINE L'inoubliable . CAMION BLANC . 978-2-35779-575-4 . fr.
  3. Book: Lecoeuvre, Fabien . Balavoine: La véritable histoire . January 2016 . Editions du Rocher . 978-2-268-08465-7 . fr.
  4. Web site: 2016-01-07 . Fabien Lecoeuvre : "Barclay trouvait que Balavoine était trop enveloppé" . 2024-04-07 . Europe 1 . fr.
  5. Web site: Les certifications . 2024-04-07 . SNEP . fr-FR.
  6. Web site: InfoDisc : Tous les Albums classés par Artiste . 2024-04-07 . infodisc.fr.