#41
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You are 100% right, Scruffy. It is and it does! Whatever the problem with the distribution of modern day French music, it has nothing to do with the language!
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#42
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I know I have said this before and I'm sure it's getting tiresome, but here it is again: I am astounded at the size of Mylene Farmer's audiences and don't understand what her draw is. Nor do I understand why Alizee can't attract crowds like this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6c0sE3lniM The video below is one of Robert Rhein's concoctions. It's a little old but I really like it. He holds off his signature flood of flying hearts until late in the video. I guess he just can't resist throwing them in. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiOL...index=350&t=0s The TRUTH Why Modern Music Is Awful https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVME_l4IwII Last edited by Shepherd; 03-17-2019 at 10:35 AM.. |
#43
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQkkmYIu95I
My guess for Mylene's appeal is that she simply is still making videos like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQkkmYIu95I I'd bet she's just more driven than Alizee is to be famous. Like a French Madonna mayhaps. Alot of people seem to like Madonna too, for reasons I don't really know. |
#44
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Quote:
You are probably right. Mylene's life is her work whereas Alizee is dedicated to living more than working. I enjoy Madonna's music, but I suspect she is a difficult person to live with. |
#45
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Mr Coucou have you ever listened to any French music apart from Alizée? I highly suspect not. Am I correct?
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Téléphone: Louise Attaque: and plenty more. So what's your point. And no, it doesn't have to be written by Boutonnat. I actually am baffled why he keeps getting mentioned on this forum. There are hundreds of French songwriters, thousands if we go into the past. They aren't all sitting around frustrated by their native language. Quote:
Just one example - each word in the chorus is one-syllable. So none of that really stands. English is a far more widely spoken language than any other. Foreign music won't get the same reach because of Americans/Brits who never consume international media. Lots of French songs actually do quite well in Europe, they just don't reach the UK. |
#46
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Given Laurent Boutonnat composed Alizee's first 2 albums it makes sense as to why he's bought up in conversation.
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#47
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I see that but everyone keeps repeating his name without actually saying anything about him.
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#48
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Quote:
You linked two songs by Noir Desir, and one by Louise Attaque: youtube won't let me watch the videos. (Do you have the titles of the songs? Maybe I could look them up on youtube.) I watched 'hygiphone' by Telephone. I'm not impressed by it. I watched "Bim Bam Toi" by Carla. I'm not impressed by it. You wrote: Quote:
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But the rest of that quote is 100% valid. I'll repeat the salient parts of that quote here: By comparison with many other languages, for songwriting English is a breeze. Lots of opportunities for rhyming lyrics, nice short words that mean a lot so you can relax the musical pace (or not) as you please [...] plus plenty of words ending in convenient vowel sounds that are easily “singable" [...] You said: Quote:
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#49
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I still think (but can't prove) that English is better for songwriting than French.
Here is another difference between English and French: I don't know if lexical stress affects songwriting. (Its interesting, anyways.) |
#50
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Aha I see, well for the classic French songs of Elsa and Hardy, the quality is in the lyrics rather than the tune. So reading the lyrics and translation brings that out. The imagery is beautifully poetic.
But it’s fine because there are also lots of great catchy tunes like those of Stromae and Soprano where the lyrics are not as crucial to enjoyment! Noir Désir - Comme Elle Vient and L’homme pressé. Indochine - L’aventurier. Louise Attaque - Ton invitation. It is in answer to your question: Quote:
Instead of trying to prove English has this property or that property, I found that when you start listening to foreign music you find there is amazing music in different languages. Quote:
Interesting Tom Scott video. English has Shakespeare and French has Molière. I think neither would work in the other language. |
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