Verlaine et Rimbaud explained

Verlaine et Rimbaud
Type:Album
Artist:Léo Ferré
Cover:Verlaine et Rimbaud.jpg
Released:December 1964
Recorded:May 1964
Barclay Studio, Paris (France)
Genre:Chanson
Length:60:19
Label:Barclay Records
Prev Title:Ferré 64
Prev Year:1964
Next Title:Léo Ferré 1916-19...
Next Year:1966

Verlaine et Rimbaud (English: "Verlaine and Rimbaud") is an album by Léo Ferré. It was released in December 1964 by Barclay Records. This album is one of the first studio double albums in popular music history (before Bob Dylan's or Frank Zappa's).

Background

Verlaine et Rimbaud is Ferré's third LP entirely dedicated to a poet, after Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal ("Flowers of Evil") in 1957 and Les Chansons d'Aragon ("Songs of Aragon") in 1961. Here, Ferré sets into music 10 poems from Arthur Rimbaud and 14 from Paul Verlaine. He considers their two different kind of poetry as a whole and mixes them in the track listing, to underline their mythical love affair. The way classical music 'soundscape' tastefully fits into tuneful and straightforward songs is something of an achievement here.

Track listing

All songs composed by Léo Ferré.

Original LP

Personnel

Credits

External links