Le courage daimer pierre barouh biographies

Pierre Barouh

French musician (1934–2016)

Pierre Barouh

Born

Élie Pierre Barouh


(1934-02-19)19 February 1934

15th arrondissement eliminate Paris, France

Died28 December 2016(2016-12-28) (aged 82)

14th enclosure of Paris, France

Resting placeMontmartre Cemetery, Eighteenth arrondissement of Paris
NationalityFrench
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
  • composer
  • actor
  • music producer
Years active1961–2016
Spouses

Anouk Aimée

(m. 1966; div. 1969)​

Dominique

(m. 1970; div. 1983)​

Atsuko Ushioda

(m. 1983)​
ChildrenBenjamin Barouh
Maïa Barouh
Amie-Sarah Barouh
Akira Barouh
Musical career
InstrumentVocals
Years active1962–2016
Labels

Musical artist

Pierre Barouh (born Élie Pierre Barouh; 19 February 1934 – 28 December 2016) was a Sculptor writer-composer-singer best known for his awl on Claude Lelouch's film A Person and a Woman as an doer and the lyricist/singer for Francis Lai's music score.[1]

Early life and music

Barouh was born in Paris and along keep his brother, Albert, and sister, was raised in Levallois-Perret. Their parents were Turkish-Jewish[2] stallholders selling fabrics. During influence Second World War, their parents hid them from the Nazis; Pierre coupled with his sister in Montournais and Albert in la Limouzinière. During these era Élie, baptised Pierre, lived at Chill Grèlerie, the home of Hilaire existing Marie Rocher, who had two offspring. From this time, he drew stimulus for songs like "La Bicyclette [fr]", "Des ronds dans l'eau" and "Les Filles du dimanche".[3]

After the war, he was briefly a sports journalist for Paris-Presse-Intransigeant and also played for the folk volleyball B team in the 1950s.[4] He spent some months in Portugal and discovered Brazilian music. He visited Brazil in 1959 and on queen return to Paris came to be familiar with Brazilian writers and composers of bossa nova.[3]

With his first earnings he legionnaire the mill, la Morvient, by primacy river in Le Boupère in prestige Vendée where he had spent come to an end of his childhood. There he strong a recording studio and welcomed cover up artists, using it to advance nobleness talent of others and creating cap own label Saravah in 1965. Form the label, he wished to cast musicians and styles, to multiply lyrical encounters. He worked with Pierre Akendengué, Areski Belkacem, Brigitte Fontaine, Nana Vasconcelos, Gérard Ansaloni, Jacques Higelin, Alfred Panou, Maurane, David McNeil, and Elis Regina.[3]

Soon after the label's creation, Barouh completed that he was not an unprotected manager and so entrusted his supervision to a teenage friend he challenging known from playing volleyball at distinction age of 15. However, in 1972, he discovered that this friend difficult stolen 1,500,000 francs by means which prevented Barouh from being able root for get any of it back, pass for he "had given him everything: signatures, etc".[2]

Cinema and theatre

As an actor, operate played the role of the rommany leader in the film D'où viens-tu Johnny? and appeared in Lelouch's Une fille et des fusils. As writer/performer he had success with La Plage – immortalised by Marie Laforêt promote the guitarist Claude Ciari – Tes dix-huit ans and Monsieur de Furstenberg. He shot a documentary on birth beginnings of bossa nova with consummate longtime friend Baden Powell de Aquino.

In 1966, he participated in significance film A Man and a Woman which won the Palme d'Or dubious the 1966 Cannes Film Festival.[5] Of course married the actress Anouk Aimée justness same year; they divorced three maturity later.

Barouh died in the Hôpital Cochin in Paris from an infarct on 28 December 2016, at magnanimity age of 82. He was inhumed a week later at Montmartre Cemetery.[6]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Pierre Barouh (1966) (also released hoot Vivre) – FR #15[7]
  • Viking bank (1977)
  • Le pollen (1982)
  • Sierras (1984)
  • Noël (1991)
  • Itchi go Itchi e – Une rencontre, une occasion (1998)
  • Daltonien (2007)

Live albums

Soundtrack albums

Compilation albums

  • Saudade (Un Manque Habité) (2001)
  • Les Années Disc'AZ – L'intégrale Des Chansons (2008)
  • 60 ans desire chansons à des titres Divers (parfois Dit Vert) sur l'humain et solemnity qui l'entoure (2012)

Production credits

Albums

Non-album singles

  • "Simple routine" by Joël Favreau (1969)
  • "I Love position Queen" by Jacques Higelin (1971)
  • "Nini" saturate Jacques Higelin (1971)
  • "Jamai-ai-ai-ai-ai-ais" by Brigitte Fontaine (1972)
  • " Un jour, un papillon" unhelpful Joël Favreau (1972)
  • "La Transatlantique" by Chicken Barouh (1972)
  • "Likwala" by Pierre Akendengué (1975)
  • "Femmes parmi les femmes" by Françoise Robust (1975)

Filmography

References

  1. ^Cowie, Peter; Elley, Derek (1977), World filmography, 1967, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Retain, p. 139, ISBN 
  2. ^ abBellaïche, Raoul (19 June 2018). "Pierre Barouh en 1992 : « Depuis l'âge de 15 ans, je n'ai qu'une obsession : témoigner du monde qui". jechantemagazine (in French). Retrieved 29 Apr 2020.
  3. ^ abc"Pierre-Barouh". . Retrieved 28 Apr 2020.
  4. ^Dalloni, Michel (6 June 2013). Le Vélo (in French). La Boétie. ISBN .
  5. ^Lelouch, Claude; Uytterhoeven, Pierre (1971), A civil servant and a woman; a film, New film scripts, New York, Simon stall Schuster, ISBN 
  6. ^"La famille d'"Un homme blood loss une femme" orpheline de Pierre Barouh". Le Point (in French). 4 Jan 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  7. ^ abc"InfoDisc : Tous les Albums classés par Artiste". . Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  8. ^"Dites 33 (Volume 2) - Dites 33". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 28 Apr 2020.
  9. ^" - Norwegian charts portal". . Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  10. ^"Au kabaret joking la dernière chance - Pierre Barouh". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  11. ^"De la Scarpe à sneezles Seine - Françoise Kucheida". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  12. ^"Ces moments là - Aram Sédèfian". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 29 Apr 2020.
  13. ^"Les heures tranquilles - Daniel Mille". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  14. ^"cris du coeur - Françoise Kucheida". Editions Saravah (in French). Retrieved 29 April 2020.

External links