Salvatore Adamo - C'est Ma Vie - Les Plus Grands Succès (2003)
Salvatore Adamo - C'est Ma Vie - Les Plus Grands Succès (2003)
CD 1 1. Tombe la neige 2. Sans toi ma mie 3. En blue jeans et blouson d'cuir 4. N'est ce pas merveilleux 5. Crier ton nom 6. Amour perdu 7. Vous permettez monsieur 8. Les filles du bord de mer 9. La nuit 10. Dolce paola 11. A vot'bon coeur 12. Quand les roses 13. Le barbu sans barbe 14. Ma tete 15. Si jamais 16. Elle 17. Ballade a la pluie 18. Viens ma brune 19. J'aime 20. Comme toujours CD 2 1. Mes mains sur tes hanches 2. Inch'allah 3. Une mêche de cheveux 4. Ton nom 5. Elle était belle pourtant 6. Une larme aux nuages 7. Le néon 8. L'amour te ressemble 9. Notre roman 10. J'ai tant de rêves dans mes bagages 11. Le ruisseau de mon enfance 12. F... comme femme 13. Pauvre verlaine 14. Il y a juste un an 15. Valse d'été 16. Oui, La Mer A Bercé Tant D'amour Dans Le Creux Des Ses Vagues Le Temps D'un Eté 17. A demain sur la lune 18. Petit bonheur 19. J'avais oublié que les roses sont roses 20. C'est ma vie
A passion for music and an emotion-tinged vocal quality has made Salvatore Adamo one of the most commercially successful singers in Europe and one of the most famous Italian immigrants living in Belgium. Since his debut album, Vous Permettez Monsieur, transformed him into an internationally recognized celebrity, Adamo has sold over 80 million copies of his albums worldwide. Adamo, who emigrated to Belgium with his parents at the age of three, was raised in Jemappes and later moved to Brussels. A bright student, Adamo was able to avoid the coal mining industry that lured many Italian immigrants to Belgium and concentrate on his academic and musical studies. Adamo's influences included the music of Victor Hugo, Jacques Prevert, and George Brassens, and the Italian canzoetta and tango. While he recorded a collection of songs from Napoli, Adamo has sung in his adopted language of French. In the mid-'60s, he reached his commercial peak, placing a number of songs at the top of the music charts including "Sans Toi Mamie" in 1963 and "Vous Permettez Monsieur," "Quand les Roses," and "Dolce Paola" in 1964. He released a string of live albums and compilations throughout the '60s and '70s, but his career trailed off in the '80s, his style being no longer fashionable.
An adaptation of Adamo's composition, "Les Filles Du Bord de Mer," was recorded by Arno in 1993 and sparked a renewed interest in his work. That year, Adamo was made an honorary UNICEF ambassador and began to visit war-torn countries in this capacity. Almost certainly as a result, his 1998 comeback album, Regards, brought a sociopolitical edge to his music with songs commenting on racism and the civil war in Bosnia. In Belgium, the album was released with two songs -- "Laat Onze Kinderen Dromen (Let The Children Dream)" and "Il Zie Een Engel (I See An Angel)" -- sung in Dutch. After that, he continued to ride a wave of nostalgia-fueled success, eventually becoming at least as famous in the new millennium as he had been in his heyday. In 2001 he was knighted by King Albert II of Belgium for his services to the country's music industry. Adamo recorded several successful studio albums during the 2000s, including the obligatory duets album -- 2008's Le Bal des Gens Bien -- on which he re-recorded some of his biggest hits with a string of hot young artistes. He showed no signs of stopping as he moved into the early 2010s, with another new album, La Grande Roue, dropping in 2012. ---Craig Harris, Rovi
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Last Updated (Thursday, 11 February 2016 12:51)