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The song is featured in the Mad Men episode "Tomorrowland" (2010). On Peter, Paul and Mary's 2014 Discovered: Live in Concert album, Peter Yarrow and Noel Stookey sing an adapted English version. A verse is used in the intro to episode 4 of the 2019 French horror TV series Marianne. In 2019, the song was covered by French pop singer Nolwenn Leroy.
Released on 30 June 2017, "Mi Gente" became the first music video by a French artist to reach one billion views, although this version of the song is not in French. Only three French-language videos, "Dernière Danse", "Papaoutai" and "Ego" have hit the 1 billion view mark, the most recent occurring on 14 September 2023.
The song was written to protest French nuclear weapons testing at Mururoa atoll in neaby French Polynesia, and was the lead single from the band's second album, Light of the Pacific. Despite receiving little radio airplay due to the innuendo in the song's title, [1] the song spent 15 weeks in the New Zealand Top 40, peaking at number 11. [2]
French singer Raquel Bitton sings "J'attendrai" on her album Boleros. Italian singer Raffaella Carrá covered the song in Italian, titled Tornerai in her 1976 album Forte Forte Forte, and later in Spanish, titled Volveré. Canadian singer Jill Barber covered the song in her French album Chansons, which was released in 2013.
The 1955 French film La Madelon, directed by Jean Boyer was a comedy based on Madelon's legend starring the great Line Renaud who plays the title character and sings the song surrounded by soldiers. Spanish actress-singer Sara Montiel sang it in the box office hit movie El Último Cuplé ( Juan de Orduña , Spain 1957).
Comme d'habitude" ([kɔm dabityd(ə)], French for "As usual") is a French song about the setting in of routine in a relationship, precipitating a breakup. It was composed in 1967 by Jacques Revaux , with lyrics by Claude François and Gilles Thibaut [ fr ] .
Le Temps des cerises (French: [lə tɑ̃ de səʁiz], The Time of Cherries) is a song written in France in 1866, with words by Jean-Baptiste Clément and music by Antoine Renard, extremely famous in French-speaking countries. The song was later strongly associated with the Paris Commune, during which verses were added to the song, thus becoming ...
The song, composed by Claude-Michel Schönberg (music), Alain Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel (original French lyrics), and Herbert Kretzmer (English lyrics) is first sung in Act I by Enjolras and the other students at the ABC Cafe as they prepare themselves to launch a rebellion in the streets of Paris during the funeral procession of General Jean Maximilien Lamarque.