Edith Piaf - Les Inoubliables : Edith Piaf (2025)

  • 31 Aug, 11:17
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Artist:
Title: Les Inoubliables : Edith Piaf
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: MLP - Michel Levy Projects
Genre: French Pop, Chanson, Jazz
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:13:19
Total Size: 170 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Edith Piaf - Mon Légionnaire
2. Edith Piaf - Le Fanion De La Légion
3. Edith Piaf - Ne M'écris Pas
4. Edith Piaf - Le Contrebandier
5. Edith Piaf - Entre Saint-Ouen Et Clignancourt
6. Edith Piaf - Dans Un Bouge Du Vieux Port
7. Edith Piaf - Mon Coeur Est Au Coin D'une Rue
8. Edith Piaf - Correqu' Et Reguyer
9. Edith Piaf - Paris-Méditerranée
10. Edith Piaf - Un Jeune Homme Chantait
11. Edith Piaf - Browning
12. Edith Piaf - C'est Toi Le Plus Fort
13. Edith Piaf - Ding, Din, Don
14. Edith Piaf - Tout Fout L'camp
15. Edith Piaf - Le Mauvais Matelot
16. Edith Piaf - Partance
17. Edith Piaf - J'entends La Sirène
18. Edith Piaf - Le Chacal
19. Edith Piaf - Un Marin Ça Fait Des Voyages
20. Edith Piaf - Madeleine Qu'avait Du Coeur
21. Edith Piaf - C'est Lui Que Mon Coeur A Choisi
22. Edith Piaf - Le Grand Voyage Du Pauvre Nègre

Édith Piaf is almost universally regarded as France's greatest popular singer. Still revered as an icon decades after her death, "The Sparrow" served as a touchstone for virtually every chansonnier, male or female, who followed her. Her greatest strength wasn't so much her technique, or the purity of her voice, but the raw, passionate power of her singing. (Given her extraordinarily petite size, audiences marveled all the more at the force of her vocals.) Her style epitomized that of the classic French chanson: highly emotional, even melodramatic, with a wide, rapid vibrato that wrung every last drop of sentiment from a lyric. She preferred melancholy, mournful material, singing about heartache, tragedy, poverty, and the harsh reality of life on the streets; much of it was based to some degree on her real-life experiences, written specifically for her by an ever-shifting cast of songwriters. Her life was the stuff of legend, starting with her dramatic rise from uneducated Paris street urchin to star of international renown. Along the way, she lost her only child at age three, fell victim to substance abuse problems, survived three car accidents, and took a seemingly endless parade of lovers, one of whom perished in a plane crash on his way to visit her. By the time cancer claimed her life at age 47, Piaf had recorded a lengthy string of genre-defining classics -- "Mon Légionnaire," "La Vie en Rose," "L'Hymne à l'Amour," "Milord," and "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien" among them -- that many of her fans felt captured the essence of the French soul.