Joe Dassin (Les Champs-Élysées)

Joe Dassin (Les Champs-Élysées)
Studio album by Joe Dassin
Released May 1969 (1969-05)
Recorded February 1968 – March 1969
Genre chanson
Label CBS Disques
Producer Jacques Plait
Joe Dassin chronology
Les Deux Mondes de Joe Dassin
(1967)
Joe Dassin (Les Champs-Élysées)
(1969)
Joe Dassin (La Fleur aux dents)
(1970)
Singles from Joe Dassin (Les Champs-Élysées)
  1. "Siffler sur la colline" / "Comment te dire"
    Released: 1968
  2. "Ma bonne étoile"
    Released: 1968
  3. "Le Petit Pain au chocolat"
    Released: 1968
  4. "Me que me que"
    Released: 1969
  5. "Le Chemin de papa" / "Les Champs-Élysées"
    Released: 1969
  6. "Mon village du bout du monde"
    Released: 1969

Joe Dassin (commonly called Les Champs-Élysées after the third track on side 1) is the third French studio album by Joe Dassin. It came out in 1969 on CBS Disques.

Commercial performance

The album reached at least the top 10 in France (according to the chart that U.S. Billboard published in its "Hits of the World" section).[1]

Track listing

Side 1
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Le Chemin de papa"Pierre Delanoë – Joe Dassin 
2."Le Petit Pain au chocolat"Pierre Delanoë – Riccardo Del Turco – Giancarlo Bigazzi 
3."Les Champs-Élysées"Pierre Delanoë – Mike Wilsh – Mike Deighan 
4."Siffler sur la colline"Daniele Pace – Mario Panzeri – Lorenzo Pilat – Jean-Michel Rivat – Frank Thomas 
5."Mon village du bout du monde"Traditionnel – Joe Dassin – Pierre Delanoë 
6."Me que - me que"Charles AznavourGilbert Bécaud 
Side 2
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Ma bonne étoile"Pierre Delanoë – Daniele Pace – Mario Panzeri – Lorenzo Pilat 
2."Un peu comme toi"Johnny Nash – Richelle Dassin 
3."La Bande à Bonnot"Joe Dassin – Francis Baxter – Camille Sauvage – Christian Jollet – Jean-Michel Rivat – Frank Thomas – Guy Favereau 
4."La Violette africaine"Richelle Dassin – Joe Dassin 
5."Le length des œufs au plat"Richelle Dassin – Claude Lemesle – Joe Dassin 
6."Sunday Times"Richelle Dassin – Joe Dassin 

Notes

The song Mon village du bout du monde is a French cover of a traditional Irish song Carrickfergus.

References

  1. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. (26 September 1970). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. pp. 73–. ISSN 0006-2510.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.