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Gilbert Bécaud

François Gilbert Léopold Silly, known professionally as Gilbert Bécaud, was a French singer, composer, pianist and actor, known as "Monsieur 100,000 Volts" for his energetic performances. His best-known hits are "Nathalie" and "Et maintenant", a 1961 release that became an English language hit as "What Now My Love". He remained a popular artist for nearly fifty years, identifiable in his dark blue suits, with a white shirt and "lucky tie"; blue with white polka dots. When asked to explain his gift he said, "A flower doesn't understand botany." His favourite venue was the Paris Olympia under the management of Bruno Coquatrix. He debuted there in 1954 and headlined in 1955, attracting 6,000 on his first night, three times the capacity. On 13 November 1997, Bécaud was present for the re-opening of the venue after its reconstruction.

Biography
Born in Toulon, France, Bécaud learned to play the piano at a young age, and then went to the Conservatoire de Nice. In 1942, he left school to join the French Resistance during World War II. He began songwriting in 1948, after meeting Maurice Vidalin, who inspired him to write his early compositions. He began writing for Marie Bizet; Bizet, Bécaud and Vidalin became a successful trio, and their partnership lasted until 1950. In 1952, he married Monique Nicholas. They had three children. While touring with Jacques Pills as a pianist, Bécaud met Édith Piaf, Pills' wife at the time. He began singing at her suggestion in 1953, with "Mes Mains" and "Les Croix". His first performance came the year after. His hits in the later part of the decade included "La Corrida" (1956), "Le Jour où la Pluie Viendra" (1957), and "C'est Merveilleux L'amour" (1958). His first hit in the English-speaking world was Jane Morgan's cover version of "Le jour où la pluie viendra" (as "The Day the Rains Came", with English lyrics by Carl Sigman) in 1958. Willie Nelson, Jerry Butler, Sam & Dave and James Brown. In 1973 he married Kitty Saint-John, with whom he had two children. He died of cancer at the age of 74. ==Career from 1960==
Career from 1960
In 1961, Bécaud wrote and recorded "Et Maintenant", one of the biggest selling singles in French history. The plot of the opera takes place on the Aran Islands, off the west coast of Ireland, although Bécaud had never been to Ireland before. After the opera's performances, he toured Europe and continued recording a string of pop music hits, including "Crois-moi ça durera" and "Tu le regretteras". He also co-wrote "Love on the Rocks" with Neil Diamond, The Czech writer Bohumil Doležal commented that the song described the guide as a KGB officer. A Russian blogger claimed that guides reported to KGB officers. The song was used to soften the image of the Soviet Union, despite Pierre Delanoë's anti-Soviet views. His song "Seul sur son étoile" became "It Must Be Him" (with English lyrics by Mack David), a hit in 1967 for the American singer Vikki Carr, Bécaud turned his focus more toward touring than recording in the 1970s. An example was his live performance at the festival The Golden Orpheus in June 1971 in Communist Bulgaria. He followed this with some acting work and at last finally took time off in 1973, citing exhaustion. In 1974, he was named Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur. The following year, he scored his one and only entry on the UK Singles Chart with "A Little Love and Understanding", Later in the century, he began writing with Pierre Grosz and then Neil Diamond, also penning the Broadway musical Roza with Julian More. on his houseboat on the Seine, and was interred in Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. Bécaud's song catalogue, running to around 450 songs, is published by BMG Music Publishing. Bécaud's song "L'Orange" was the featured track in one of the trailers of the movie Léon (aka The Professional) by Luc Besson. ==Discography==
Discography
Albums Studio albums • 1953 : Gilbert Bécaud et ses chansons • 1954 : Young Man of Paris in Moods of Love (recorded in New York) • 1955 : Récital N° 1 – Mes grands succès • 1956 : Alors raconte • 1958 : Salut les copains • 1959 : Pilou... Pilou... hé • 1961 : Tête de bois • 1962 : Le Bateau blanc • 1964 : Le Pianiste de Varsovie • 1969 : L'Un d'entre eux inventa la mort • 1972 : Gilbert raconte et Bécaud chante • 1974 : Hier et aujourd'hui • 1975 : Je t'aime mon frère • 1976 : L'Amour c'est l'affaire des gens • 1978 : C'est en septembre • 1980 : Moi, je veux chanter • 1981 : Bonjour la vie • 1984 : On attend, on attend • 1987 : Le Retour • 1989 : Fais-moi signe • 1993 : Une vie comme un roman • 1996 : Ensemble • 1999 : Faut faire avec Live albums • 1955–2002: 15 different albums all live at Olympia Plus rarities: • 1957 : À l'Olympia – no 2 • 1971 : Récital du festival de l'Orphée d'or 71 (Bulgarian release, with 4 more tracks by Jennifer) • 1978 : Au Québec – Récital en direct du Grand Théâtre de Québec • 2013 : Concerts inédits 1956–1958 Operas, musical comedies, compositions • 1960 : L'Enfant à l’Étoile (cantate de Noël) (with Orchestre Philharmonique, and choir of ORTF) • 1962 : L'Opéra d'Aran – (2-act opera, music by Bécaud. But he didn't sing on the tracks) • 1965 : Concerto pour piano • 1972 : La Répétition • 1976 : Heureux comme un poisson dans l'eau (publicité) • 1986 : Roza (musical) • 1992 : Aran Opéra (double CD on RCA/BMG, recorded live in 1966, sung by Bécaud) Soundtracks • 1971 : La Maison sous les arbres (instrumental) • 2007 : Roman de gare Compilations • 1959 : Croquemitoufle (compilation 1953–1958) • 1988 : Bécaulogie (9 CD collection) • 1997 : Bécolympia (2 CDs, 38 tracks live, 1955–1983) • 2003: Bécolympia (re-released with different order of track list and 1 more bonus) • 2002 : 50 Ans en Chansons (Long box 3 CDs, many unreleased materials) • 2004 : 100 Chansons d'or (4 CDs, with 6 unreleased tracks) • 2009 : Best of (3 CDs, 49 tracks) • 2011 : Best of Eternel (2 CDs, 46 tracks remastered) • 2011 : Anthologie Gilbert Becaud 1953–1959 (edited by Frémeaux & Associés – 2 CDs, 36 tracks chosen by André Bernard) • 2011 : Essentiel (12 CD box, 9 studio albums remastered, plus best singles + 2 CDs live (Best of Olympia 1955–1983) + 1 CD of bonus tracks + 64-page booklet of text and rare photos) • 2012 : Best of 3 CD (live at l'Olympia + the album Une vie comme un roman + parts from album Ensemble and Fais-moi signe + 3 bonus tracks in German, Sony Music release) • 2012 : 100 Chansons (4 CDs, with 8 unreleased tracks from a concert at L’Olympia in 1960) Singles Emblematic songs and compositions: 1950s • "Mes mains" • "Les Croix" • "Mé qué mé qué" • "Les enfants oubliés" • "Je t'appartiens" • "Les Marchés de Provence" • "Le jour où la pluie viendra" • "La Ballade des baladins" • "Salut les copains" 1960s • "Et maintenant" • "(Âge tendre et) Tête de bois" • "Dimanche à Orly" • "Quand Jules est au violon" • "Nathalie" • "L'Orange" • "Quand il est mort le poète" • "L'important c'est la rose" • "Je reviens te chercher" 1970s • "C'est en septembre" • "La Solitude ça n'existe pas" • "L'Indifférence" • "Un peu d'amour et d'amitié" 1980s • "Désirée" • "L'Amour est mort" • "Faut faire avec" International / local versions • 1955: "Je t'appartiens" / "Let It Be Me" (Pierre Delanoë – Gilbert Bécaud) • 1957: "Le Jour où la pluie viendra" / "The Day the Rains Came" (Pierre Delanoë – Gilbert Bécaud) • 1961: "Et maintenant" / "What Now My Love" (Pierre Delanoë – Gilbert Bécaud – Elvis Presley) • 1966: "Seul sur son étoile" / "It Must Be Him" (Maurice Vidalin – Gilbert Bécaud) • 1966: "Plein soleil" / "Sand and Sea" (Maurice Vidalin – Gibert Bécaud) • 1967: "L'important c'est la rose" / "The Importance of Your Love" (Louis Amade - Gilbert Bécaud) • 1972: "Un peu d'amour et d'amitié" / "A Little Love and Understanding" (Louis Amade – Gilbert Bécaud) • 1979: "C'est en septembre" / "September Morn" (Neil Diamond – Gilbert Bécaud) ==Filmography==
Filmography
• 1953: Boum sur Paris as Himself • 1956: The Country I Come From as Eric Perceval / Julien Barrère • 1957: Casino de Paris as Jacques Merval • 1959: Croquemitoufle as Bernard Villiers • 1960: In 80 Takten um die Welt (TV film) • 1962: Girl on the Road as an Air France pilot • 1973: Un homme libre as Henri Lefèvre • 1974: Toute une vie as Himself • 1995: Navarro as Sarkis (French TV series) ==Bibliography==
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