Histoire De Melody Nelson
 
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Histoire De Melody Nelson

Serge GainsbourgMP3 Download
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

 
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  Song Title Time Price    
  1. Melody 7:32 Not Available  
  2. Ballade De Melody Nelson 2:02 Not Available  
  3. Valse De Melody 1:31 Not Available  
  4. Ah Melody 1:46 Not Available  
  5. L'Hôtel Particulier 4:07 Not Available  
  6. En Melody 3:25 Not Available  
  7. Cargo Culte 7:36 Not Available  
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Product details

  • Original Release Date: 14 July 2009
  • Release Date: 14 July 2009
  • Label: UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)
  • Copyright: (C) 2001 Mercury (France)
  • Total Length: 27:59
  • Genres:
  • ASIN: B0059E3TFA
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 38 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I don't speak or understand the French language, I stopped drinking alcohol 20 years ago and don't smoke BUT Serge Gainsbourg (almost as famous for his boozing and smoking as his music) is one of my great heroes. I love his music so much I got a tattoo of his face on my arm ...and for me Histoire de Melody Nelson is his finest 28 minutes. It's mystical, sexy, seductive, dirty and even a bit vulgar. A concept album about doomed love for an English teenage girl, played by his greatest muse and partner Jane Birkin on the record and the glorious record cover. Birkin stands teasing in just blue jeans clutching a cuddly monkey to her breast. Jane told me in an interview that she placed this monkey in Gainsbourg's coffin with him when he died. The beautiful iconic cover would be worth the price of admission alone but the music is even more mesmerising. During the 60s, and still in in 1971, when this album was originally released, most people were content to make variations on a theme created by The Beatles, Bob Dylan and Brian Wilson... but what Serge offered had a completely unique and individual voice. The gophic bookend tracks of the album Melody and Cargo Culte sound extraordinarily modern even today. There is great tenderness and melancholy in Ballade de Melody Nelson and Ah! Melody. Witness the sound of Jane Birkin laughing hysterically over the grooviest of 70s psych-grooves on En Melody. Birkin was actually being tickled by her brother Andrew Birkin while Serge had a tape running on record under her bed. Don't be put off by the short running time, length doesn't matter, it's what you do with it that counts.
Histoire de Melody Nelson is ultra cool, ultra sexy and ultra modern music.
Je T'aime, Gainsbourg.
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
What you get here for your money is a guitar/bass/drums power trio playing groove based backings that veer towards the looser side of music, luscious strings that have never accompanied such a band in such a perfect way before or since, and a pervy frenchman trying it on with a young english lass.

This album is great. It's great in the way that Can and Faust are great. It's great in the way Miles Davis is great. Buy it.

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Serge Gainsbourg's L' Histoire de Melody Nelson is a 28-minute concept album that fuses elements of rock, funk, cabaret and lounge-jazz, with more subdued moments of poetry, atmosphere and orchestration. As a record, it pretty much sticks closely to Gainsbourg's key-themes, such as drunken debauchery, feckless seduction, and soul-destroying lust, with the singer managing to convey some truly heartfelt and heart-breaking moments of deep emotion within that intoxicating haze of excess, caricature and over-indulgence. The fact that it can be categorised as a concept album shouldn't put anyone off making the purchase (especially if you're already interested in Gainsbourg's work), with Melody really standing as one of the few song-cycles that manages to side-step pretension (a few others off the top of my head would include Astral Weeks, Song Cycle, Village Green Preservation Society, Promenade and In The Aeroplane Over The Sea), conveying an emotionally engaging story that is both fun and through-provoking, without feeling the need to indulge in ten-minute long instrumental pieces, or a message about nuclear war.

As with all Gainsbourg's work, Melody is a personal expression wrapped up in a guise of canny song writing, devilish arrangements and dips into pure lyrical melodrama. The central concept sees Serge stepping into the role of a middle-aged businessman, who develops some intense feelings of lust for English teenager Melody Nelson (...after he accidentally knocks her down with his car!!!). The album then goes on to chronicle the seduction and eventual relationship, with Serge narrating in a sleazy whisper - over an evocative and constantly free-flowing bed of acoustic guitars, subtle-pianos, heavy-bass riffs, pounding drums and waltzing orchestral flourishes - a doomed romance of innumerable proportions. It all sounds great to me... like a soundtrack to a film that was never made, with Gainsbourg conveying a multitude of character emotions (going from apathetic, to lustful, to gentle and perverted) that are always mirrored perfectly by those forceful musical arrangements. I'm not going to pretend that I understand every lyric that Gainsbourg croons (seeing as I only have a slight grasp of the French language), nor will I pretend that such rudimentary understanding is integral to the enjoyment of this album. For me, every single word spoken by Serge is understandable... because his voice is so packed full of warmth, character and charisma.

Like all the great albums, L' Histoire de Melody Nelson has a sound and ideology of it's own, which means that such notions of language and location are stripped away by the feeling that is instilled within the listener through the combination of the words, voice, soul and music (yes, yes... forgive the hyperbole!!). After all, aren't albums like Revolver, Pet Sounds, Let it Bleed, Astral Weeks and Blonde on Blonde just as potent and popular in France, Italy, Germany, etc, as they are in English speaking countries like here and in the U.S.? Think about it. There's also a detectable influence from this found on albums like the Great Escape by Blur (something suitably moody like The Universal, or even End of a Century from Parklife), as well as most of the 90's albums from Pulp (This is Hardcore has a definite Gainsbourg feel), The Divine Comedy's A Short Album About Love (something like In Pursuit of Happiness and I'm All You Need), the work of Nick Cave and Tom Waits, and of course, a track like Paper Tiger from Beck's great album Sea Change (so the album should be even easier to comprehend now than it was back in 1971).

My favourite moments from the album would be Melody, Ballade de Melody Nelson and Cargo Culte, though in all fairness, it is wrong to pick favourites!! This is an album that should be experienced from beginning to end in one unbroken sitting, as the listeners allow themselves to be drawn into the central relationship, consumed by the passion and melodramatic excess, and eventually spat out on the other side of heartache. Throughout the record, Gainsbourg is writing and performing (some of vocal delivery is more akin to acting than singing... as he creates a character, a mood and an emotion, etc) at an extremely high-calibre. The arrangements and overall band performance is great too, particularly the bass, which creates a deep and hypnotic groove that you could get lost in, and those strings, which suggest Latin and also middle-eastern influences, are perfect, managing to capture that grand old rainy day melancholy, in the most cinematic sense!!

L' Histoire de Melody Nelson is a fine album that has aged perfectly and makes a lot more sense now with the references of recent bands and pop icons dipping their toe into the seedy world of Serge, whilst mining a similarly libidinous path of excess on a road to emotional despair. Ultimately, the album shows Gainsbourg's influence on contemporary music and cements his reputation as a poet and performer far greater than the drinking, chain-smoking and on-camera propositions to Whitney Huston would suggest.

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