Françoise Hardy (1963 album)

Françoise Hardy is the second studio album of the French popular singer Françoise Hardy, released in October 1963 on LP by French label Disques Vogue (FH 1). She was accompanied by the Marcel Hendrix Orchestra.[1] Like Hardy's previous album, the album was released with no title, except for her name on the cover, and this album colloquially become known by the title of its most successful song, "Le Premier Bonheur du jour" ("The First Joy of the Day").

Le premier bonheur du jour
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1963 (France)
RecordedStudio Vogue
Villetaneuse, France
GenreFrench pop
Length26:00
LanguageFrench
LabelDisques Vogue
ProducerJacques Wolfsohn
Françoise Hardy chronology
Tous les garçons et les filles
(1962)
Le premier bonheur du jour
(1963)
Françoise Hardy canta per voi in italiano
(1963)
Alternative cover
English cover (1964)

"Le premier bonheur du jour" was covered by Brazilian band Os Mutantes on their debut 1968 album, and decades later on the 2014 album Dream a Little Dream by Pink Martini and The von Trapps.

Track listing

Except as noted, lyrics and music were written by Françoise Hardy.

  1. "Le Premier Bonheur du jour" (lyrics: Franck Gérald; music: Jean Renard) – 1:53
  2. "Va pas prendre un tambour" (lyrics: Maurice Vidalin; music: Jacques Dutronc) – 2:50
  3. "Saurai-je?" – 2:05
  4. "Toi je ne t'oublierai pas" (lyrics: André Salvet, Claude Carrère; music: Jean-Pierre Bourtayre) – 2:24
  5. "Avant de t'en aller" (original title: "Think About It", lyrics and music: Paul Anka) – 1:57
    First performed by: Paul Anka, 1963; French adaptation: Françoise Hardy
  6. "Comme tant d'autres" – 2:35
  7. "J'aurais voulu" – 2:10
  8. "Nous tous" – 1:43
  9. "L'Amour d'un garçon" (original title: "The Love of a Boy", lyrics: Hal David; music: Burt Bacharach) – 2:10
    First performed by: Timi Yuro, 1962,[2] French adaptation: Françoise Hardy
  10. "Le sais-tu ?" – 1:44
  11. "L'Amour ne dure pas toujours" – 1:45
  12. "On dit de lui" (original title: "It's Gonna Take Me Some Time", lyrics and music: Don Christopher, Don Stirling, Harold Temkin) – 2:42
    First performed by: Connie Francis, 1962,[3] French adaptation: Françoise Hardy[4]

Editions

LP records: first editions in the English-speaking world

Reissues on CD

Reissue on 180g Vinyl

Notes and references

  1. "Françoise Hardy - Françoise Hardy". Discogs.com. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  2. Published as a single, SP Liberty Records US (55519), 1962; collected on LP The Best of Timi Yuro, Liberty Records US (7286), 1963, CD The Best of Timi Yuro, EMI Records US (0777-7-80182-23), 1996.
  3. SP MGM (1165), 1962 – LP Sings for Mama, MGM (SE-4294), 1965.
  4. In-between, an instrumental version was recorded by the quintet Les Cyclones: EP Vogue (EPL 8117),1962 (their first 45 was recorded in 1961 under the name El Toro et les Cyclone; the group was then a quartet with guitarist Jacques Dutronc).
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