Variations sur le même t'aime | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Vanessa Paradis |
Cover: | Variations_sur_le_même_t'aime.jpg |
Released: | 28 May 1990 (France, Belgium & Switzerland) 18 June 1990 (Canada) September 1990 (Europe, Asia & South America) |
Recorded: | April 1990 |
Studio: | Studio Guillaume Tell, Suresnes Local Studio, Rueil-Malmaison |
Length: | 50:21 |
Prev Title: | M&J |
Prev Year: | 1988 |
Next Title: | Vanessa Paradis |
Next Year: | 1992 |
Variations sur le même t'aime is the second album by popular French singer Vanessa Paradis. It was released in France in 1990, and contains the hit singles "Tandem" and "Dis-lui toi que je t'aime".
For this album, she reunited with the team of writers and producers of her first album. She also collaborated with Serge Gainsbourg, who helped write and produce the album. Although the album was successful and charted higher than her debut, none of its singles matched the success of "Joe le Taxi" from her first album.
Consistently termed her most cohesive work, Gainsbourg's lyrics frequently contain innuendo or double entendre, including the album's title. The highest-charting and biggest-selling single from the album was "Tandem".
"Variations sur le même t'aime" literally means "Variations on the same 'love you'" with the double meaning of "Variations on the same theme"; the title was coined by Serge Gainsbourg as an allusion to his hit song with Jane Birkin, "Je t'aime".
The album is the last record Gainsbourg worked on for a female singer before his death in 1991.
Keeping in tradition with all of Vanessa Paradis' albums, Variations sur le même t'aime features one English-language track, a cover of Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side". The single "Dis-lui toi que je t'aime" remains the most performed song (live) from this album. Released in 1990, the album has remained in print and sells primarily in Paradis' native France as well as in French-speaking Canada.
All songs written by Serge Gainsbourg (lyrics) and Franck Langolff (music), except where noted.
Peak position | ||
French Albums (SNEP)[2] | 6 |
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