Une saison en enfer (album) explained

Une saison en enfer
Type:Album
Artist:Léo Ferré
Cover:Unesaisonenenfer.jpg
Released:November 1991
Recorded:October 1991
Regson Studio, Milan
Genre:Chanson, Song
Length:67:10
Label:EPM Musique, La Mémoire et la Mer
Producer:Léo Ferré
Prev Title:Les Vieux Copains
Prev Year:1990
Next Title:Métamec
Next Year:2000

Une saison en enfer (English: A Season in Hell) is Léo Ferré's last studio album. It sets into music the whole eponymous poem written in 1873 by French poet Arthur Rimbaud. The album was released in 1991 by EPM Musique (982 181), for the 100th anniversary of Rimbaud's death, both as double LP and CD. It was reissued in 2000 by Ferré's son's label La Mémoire et la Mer, under a new cover.

Unlike his previous musical works on poets such as Apollinaire (1954), Baudelaire (1957, 1967, 1977, 1987), Louis Aragon (1961), or Verlaine and Rimbaud (1964), Ferré chose here bareness in the arrangements (piano, whistling, claps of hands, and nothing more but the voice declaiming, whispering or chanting) to provide the illusion of a half-improvised music and keep the poem's "original spouting strength",[1] and most of all express his own conception of oral poetry by letting himself being only guided by musicality of rimbadian prose itself.

Being connected with Rimbaud's poetic themes, Ferré gives an interpretation which "lightens" the meanings of the text.[2]

Track listing

Text : Arthur Rimbaud. Music, piano, whistling, clapping & singing : Léo Ferré.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Céline Chabot-Canet, Léo Ferré : une voix et un phrasé emblématiques. L'Harmattan, 2008, p. 147.
  2. Céline Chabot-Canet, Op. cit., p. 163.