Nicolas Skorsky Explained

Birth Name:Jacques Robert Penel Skorsky
Birth Date:16 May 1952
Birth Place:Paris, France
Death Place:Paris, France
Occupation:Composer, songwriter, musician
Label:Carrere Records, Philips Records

Jacques Robert Penel Skorsky, known as Nicolas Skorsky (May 16, 1952, Paris, France – October 20, 2014, Paris, France)[1] was a French composer, lyricist, and music producer.

Biography

Born in Paris, Nicolas Skorsky began studying music at the age of six. He pursued his secondary education at Masséna High School in Nice and then moved on to the regional conservatory where he learns solfeggio.[2]

He took advantage of the events of May 1968 to return to Paris where Catherine Sauvage, known for singing Aragon or Léo Ferré, commissioned a song from him: it became Gare du Nord (1970) for which he wrote both the lyrics and the music while he was not yet eighteen.

With this calling card, he arrived at Carrère as a singer-songwriter of Comme je t'aime (1972).

He launched a career as a songwriter and composer, crafting commercially successful tunes like Une bague et un collier (for Ringo, 1972, at Carrère), Chanson populaire (for Claude François, 1973, at Flèche Productions), La Bonne Franquette (for Herbert Pagani, 1974 – EMI), Une chanson française (Claude François, 1975, Flèche), as well as Pour ne rien te cacher (Marie Laforêt, 1974, Polydor), and Finalement on s'habitue (for Daniel Guichard, 1973, Barclay).

Later on, Skorsky shifted his focus towards production, starting in 1974 with the album Crystal Grass – Crystal World (Polydor), which became one of the first French hits in the emerging disco genre in the United States. He then established his own company, Fauves-Puma, which produced La Vie en couleur (Polydor, 1976), performed by a one-man band, Rémy Bricka. Adding to his achievements, he received the grand composition prize from the Yamaha Music Foundation at the World Festival in Tokyo for Dans le ciel (Into the sky, 1976, Polydor Japan).

Afterward, he crossed paths with Donna Summer while working on the soundtrack for the film Thank God It's Friday, where he wrote the instrumental theme Sevilla Nights, which achieved platinum status in the United States (1978, Casablanca Records & Filmworks).

He produced Jean-Claude Petit's jazz-rock album, The Best of All Possible Worlds (WEA, 1980). In 1985, Skorsky once again composed a soundtrack for the film Douce France by François Chardeaux, a television series produced by FR3.

In 1990, his collaboration with Rozlyne Clarke led to the writing and production of a pop-dance album titled Gorgeous.

Nicolas Skorsky was found murdered, with his throat slit, at his residence in Paris on the morning of October 20, 2014. To this day, the investigation has not resolved this case.[3] [4] He was laid to rest at the Passy Cemetery.

Discography

Source:[5]

As a songwriter

For Claude François

For Ringo

For Daniel Guichard

For Rémy Bricka

As a producer

References

  1. Web site: matchID – Moteur de recherche des décès . 2023-12-07 . deces.matchid.io.
  2. Web site: Telestar.fr . 2018-07-18 . Claude François, la malédiction : son parolier de Chans... – Télé Star . 2023-12-07 . www.telestar.fr . fr.
  3. Web site: 2014-10-20 . Le compositeur d'un tube de Claude François retrouvé égorgé chez lui . 2023-12-07 . Franceinfo . fr-FR.
  4. Web site: 2014-10-20 . L'ex-parolier de Claude François et Daniel Guichard retrouvé égorgé chez lui . 2023-12-07 . leparisien.fr . fr-FR.
  5. Web site: Nicolas Skorsky . 2023-12-07 . Discogs . ru.

External links