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The song was first recorded (lyrics and music) in French by Françoise Hardy in 1964 under the title "Dans le monde entier", featured on the album Mon amie la rose (catalogue number CLD 699.30). It was released in France in October 1964.
Françoise Hardy heard an "American instrumental version" of the song and her manager asked Serge Gainsbourg to provide suitable lyrics for it. [6] The resultant "Comment te dire adieu" was combined with an arrangement relatively closer to the Caravelli version and included on Hardy's 1968 album.
"Tous les garçons et les filles" (English: "All the Boys and Girls") is a song by French singer-songwriter Françoise Hardy, with Roger Samyn credited as co-writer on Hardy's original 1962 yé-yé-era recording. The song recounts the feelings of a young person who has never known love and her envy of the couples that surround her.
The lyrics for the song are about a Martian who descends from the sky to ask for the hand of the narrator. [8] Written by Hardy, the lyrics of "Mer" ("Sea") concern suicide in a gentle manner, as she intones: "I would love to fall asleep in the sea—magical, original, in its essential rhythm. I would love the sea to take me back to be reborn ...
Well alias Charles Blackwell: F. Hardy / music: B. Well) – 2:41 A2: "Mon amie la rose" (lyrics: Cécile Caulier / music: Cécile Caulier and Jacques Lacome) – 2:17
Except as noted, words and music were written by Françoise Hardy, and she is accompanied by the Charles Blackwell orchestra. [4] "Ma jeunesse fout le camp" – 3:05 Lyrics and music written by: Guy Bontempelli First performed by: Michèle Arnaud, 1962 "Viens là" – 2:25 "Mon amour adieu" – 2:20 Music written by: Hasell [5] "La Fin de l ...
Comment te dire adieu is the ninth studio album by French singer-songwriter Françoise Hardy, released in 1968 on Disques Vogue.Like many of her previous records, it was originally released without a title and came to be referred to, later on, by the name of its most popular song.
Télé Monte-Carlo (TMC) internally selected "L'amour s'en va" as its entrant for the 8th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. [4]On 23 March 1963, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the BBC Television Centre in London hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and broadcast live throughout the continent.