Georges Moustaki - Les 35 plus belles chansons de… (2014)
Artist: Georges Moustaki
Title: Les 35 plus belles chansons de…
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Pomelo Records
Genre: Pop, Chanson
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 01:52:04
Total Size: 704 Mb / 298 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Les 35 plus belles chansons de…
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Pomelo Records
Genre: Pop, Chanson
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 01:52:04
Total Size: 704 Mb / 298 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Le meteque
02. Flamenco des flandres
03. Sarah
04. L´Espagne au coeur
05. Les musiciens
06. Jou jou
07. Le facteur
08. Sacco e vanzetti (la marche de sacco e vanzetti)
09. Venez danser
10. Il est trop tard
11. Haiti cherie
12. La ligne droite
13. Votre fille a vingt ans
14. La darniere chance
15. L´amour a la musique
16. Ma solitude
17. Pecheur
18. Une cousine
19. Pourtant dans le monde
20. La carte du tendre
21. Le temps de vivre
22. Nous voulions
23. sinfoniero
24. Les colombes
25. Jeux dangereux
26. Ma liberte
27. Un jour tu es parti
28. Le métèque
29. Idee folle
30. Lazy blues
31. Mon corps
32. Les orteis au soleil
33. De Shangai a Bangkok
34. Joseph
35. Le tango de demain
Although he achieved his greatest fame in France, singing French-language songs in a distinctly French style, singer/songwriter Georges Moustaki was more a citizen of the world -- or, as he often put it, a "citizen of the French language." Christening himself a cultural "mongrel" in his signature hit "Le Métèque," Moustaki's first love was the classic-style French chanson, but he often appropriated bits of world folk musics from Greece, Turkey, the Middle East, Brazil (bossa nova and MPB), Argentina (tango), and other parts of Latin America, the United States (blues and jazz), Holland, and anywhere else his travels took him. Simplicity was a hallmark of many of his own recordings; possessed of a soft, warm voice, he often sang with only his own guitar for accompaniment, creating an intimacy that translated to his live gigs as well. A successful artist in his own right, Moustaki initially made his name as a songwriter of some renown, composing material for many of the top French singers of the late '50s and '60s (including Edith Piaf's classic "Milord"). He moonlighted as a poet, actor, novelist, and journalist at various points in his career, and remained one of France's more ambitious artists as his trademark beard and long, flowing hair turned white.