Tiny Yong - L'Intégrale
Tiny Yong - L'Intégrale
The Cambodian yé-yé girl twist.
taking music to make drugs to.
Tiny Yong - L'Intégrale
The Cambodian yé-yé girl twist.
Publié par Pedal à 9:23 PM 3 commentaires
Chantal Goya - Les Années 60
Chantal needs no introduction to readers of this blog, really, other than to say that if you haven't seen Masculin Feminin, what are you waiting for?
Publié par Pedal à 10:54 PM 2 commentaires
Les Fleurs de Pavot - S/T (1968)
This is considered to be one of the finest French psych records out there, and rightly so. Les Fleurs de Pavot were far from being actual hippies, however--their image was created by their Svengali, Jean-Pierre Rawson, in an exploitative effort that was rather typical of the era. The band had issued several EP's as the serviceable beat quintet Les Bourgeois de Calais before Rawson decided that transforming them into hippie freaks (one of them was supposedly named Jesus and from San Francisco) was the way to go. The album was produced by the unbelievable dream team of Jean-Claude Vannier and Bernard Estardy, and it shows...the arrangements are brilliant, the lyrics reference drugs as often as possible, and the atmosphere is highly lysergic. This album doesn't need drugs to be enjoyed--nay, this album IS drugs.
Publié par Pedal à 8:48 PM 0 commentaires
(Drugburn is going to begin posting full albums. This is the first. I look forward to posting the finest French albums I have in the realms of prog, psychedelia, experimental music, nouvelle scène, and more in the future.)
Florent Marchet - Gargilesse
Phantasmagoric modern French pop from one of the biggest (albeit underrated) talents of the nouvelle scène, Florent Marchet. His music is dreamy and beautifully crafted with a slightly psychedelic vibe similar to some of my other favorites like Pierre Bondu and Albin de la Simone.
Here is the video for "Rio Baril," the title track from his most recent album:
Publié par Pedal à 8:27 PM 1 commentaires
Jane Birkin is my hero. This clip intersperses her singing with clips from the film Je T'aime...Moi Non Plus, written and directed by Serge and starring Jane with Joe Dallesandro of Warhol film fame. I thought the film was well done, very bittersweet and bleak.
Publié par Pedal à 5:21 PM 4 commentaires
I'm not the biggest Liza Minnelli fan, but I must say that her cover of "You're So Vain" (from her 1973 album The Singer) is fantastic. I've been grooving to this slice of orchestral pop-rock heaven all day long.
Publié par Pedal à 11:41 PM 2 commentaires
I just revamped two of my oldest Drugburn posts from way back before I posted any mp3's. Both now have songs attached, so go take a look.
The Blades of Grass
The Gordian Knot
Publié par Pedal à 11:38 PM 0 commentaires
I thought I would have to dig through my music to find something good enough to inaugurate my first official music post in over a year. As it turns out, the obvious choice was practically staring me in the face--French soundtrack composer, keyboardist, and studio engineer Bernard Estardy. Estardy worked with big names like Françoise Hardy, Nino Ferrer, and Johnny Hallyday in the sixties and seventies as well as building and operating his own recording studio and creating some of the most bizarre, gorgeous music the jazz/funk genre has to offer.
1967's La Formule Du Baron, the album pictured above, is Estardy's most acclaimed record. Like Jean-Claude Vannier's masterpiece L'Enfant Assassin Des Mouches, Baron is an experimental concept album steeped in intricate arrangements and peculiar sound effects. "Cha Tatch Ka" sounds like something between evil bossa nova and African psychedelia, while "Monsieur Dutour" (an homage to the brilliant trumpet player Pierre Dutour) borrows the horn riff from Serge Gainsbourg's "Initials BB" (which Dutour may or may not have played on).
Please enjoy. It feels good to be back.
Estardy interview on French Attack
Waxidermy post on Estardy's Electro Sounds Volume 2 album
Publié par Pedal à 3:22 PM 3 commentaires
Salut--it's been a long, long time since I last posted on this blog. Despite my former inconsistencies, the hiatus is now finally over, and I'm determined to post on a consistent basis from now until doomsday. Reading all the old comments, I was inspired by how much you all have appreciated my posts in the past, and I realised that I had to bring Drugburn back for good.
Some small changes are in store for Drugburn--since the advent of Youtube, I'll be able to post videos much more easily, for one. I also want to broaden the scope of the musical content to include some French/Belgian/Québequois punk and new wave, French experimental music, and whatever else I am really enjoying and wanting to share with the readers of this blog. Last but not least, I'm planning on posting playlists within the blog every so often.
Stay tuned for a new music post in the next twenty-four hours!
Love,
Pedal
Publié par Pedal à 1:37 PM 1 commentaires
Je Suis D'Accord
Media Player doesn't seem to like this file, so try opening it with Quicktime.
Publié par Pedal à 9:21 AM 7 commentaires
Here's some more audiovisual Drugburn--the impossibly skinny Michel Polnareff singing "Le Roi Des Fourmis" quasi-live on French TV in 1967. Salut!
(The video is in .avi format, so if it doesn't work for you, go here.)
Publié par Pedal à 7:06 PM 3 commentaires
Dutronc and band perform in front of a pop art backdrop. Je l'aime beaucoup!
"J'aime Les Filles" video
(The video is in .avi format, so if it doesn't work for you, go here.)
Publié par Pedal à 10:34 AM 7 commentaires
Here we have Jacques Dutronc singing "Les Cactus" on a television show. There are no words.
Publié par Pedal à 7:58 PM 6 commentaires
I'm pleased to present Drugburn's first video--the Scopitone for France Gall's "Laisse Tomber Les Filles." I'm too lazy to do a screen capture--just watch it, okay?
More yé-yé videos to come.
Edit: I got rid of the file because I was worried about my hosting site's bandwith, but it's all over Youtube, so from now on the link will point to them.
Publié par Pedal à 9:15 AM 8 commentaires
Now is the time...here is the Seahorse Liberation Army's "We Set Paris On Fire," final final version. Pass it on!
(Now if only the students would join in.)
Happy Paris riots 2005.
Publié par Pedal à 5:24 PM 3 commentaires