Maxime Le Forestier
演员
28
电影
21
电视节目
Maxime Le Forestier (born 10 February 1949 as Bruno Le Forestier) is a French singer-songwriter.
Bruno Le Forestier was born on 10 February 1949 in Paris to father Robert Le Forestier and mother Genevieve (née Lili 1917—2010) who had lived in England. He had two older sisters, Annette (born 1943) and Catherine (born 1946).
His musical training started on the violin. He attended the Lycée Condorcet, where he studied literature.
In 1965, he formed a duo (Cat et Maxime) with his sister Catherine. Playing at cabaret venues on Paris' Left Bank, the pair met and formed a friendship with Georges Moustaki. They were amongst the first artists to cover a number of songs by Moustaki – including Ma Liberté and Ma Solitude. In 1968, Catherine joined Moustaki as a backing singer. Le Forestier began to focus on songwriting and composed Ballade pour un traître which was recorded and released by the French/Italian singer and actor, Serge Reggiani.
Le Forestier continued as part-time singer/songwriter during his military service (beginning 1969) with a parachute regiment (the inspiration for the song Parachutiste). He recorded two songs: Cœur de Pierre, Face de Lune, and La Petite Fugue.
His military service ending September 1970, Le Forestier refocused on his musical career. He developed a folksy style which was enormously popular in the 1970s and 1980s. He and his sister spent the summer of 1971 living in the Castro District of San Francisco at the invitation of his friend, Luc Alexandre. The experience, and meeting Allen Ginsberg, was the inspiration of a popular song, San Francisco.
His first album Mon Frère, released in 1973, contains several pieces that have entered French folklore, including the title song Mon frère, San Francisco, Comme un arbre and Education sentimentale. He toured extensively, both in France and abroad. In 1976, he toured in 14 cities in the USSR. Recently he has gained particular acclaim for his reworkings of the songs of Georges Brassens.
"San Francisco", one of his best known songs, begins with the line: "C'est une maison bleue adossée à la colline" (meaning "It's a blue house with its back to the hill"). In 1971, a young Le Forestier was living in a hippie commune, called "Hunga Dunga", in a blue house situated at 3841 18th Street in San Francisco. The anthemic song was written as a fond tribute to Le Forestier’s housemates and hippie friends, and the names mentioned in the song refer to real people. These include Phil Polizatto, who recalls with great affection Le Forestier’s stay in the blue house, in a critically acclaimed book entitled “Hunga Dunga: Confessions of an Unapologetic Hippie”. In the summer of 2011, the house was repainted from light green to its original blue, and a plaque dedicated to Le Forestier was unveiled by the French Consul, pointing to the cultural importance of the song in French popular culture.
Maxime Le Forestier has participated in Les Enfoirés, the annual concert to raise money for the charity Restaurants du Cœur, since 1995.
Source: Article "Maxime Le Forestier" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
作为演员/演员
期待周日的到来
自己
相当一个晚上
自己
香榭丽舍大街
自己
撇号
自己
周日会议
自己
大棋盘
自己
第一
自己
世界是你的
自己
12:30
自己
塔拉塔塔 100% 直播
自己
远程马丁
自己
音乐胜利
自己
迪科拉玛
自己
3000万好友
自己
无处可去
自己
星学院
自己
星星 90
自己
马拉松
自己
一个世界,一个眼神
曾几何时,香榭丽舍大街
自我(存档片段)
直截了当
自己
您最喜欢的 40 首 Enfoirés 歌曲
自我(存档片段)
立即出发
自己
汽车钥匙
Singer by the fireside
M.艾迪和部落
自己
Les Enfoirés - 从 1985 年至今的合唱团 Les Enfoirés
卡瓦纳,直到最后一秒我都会写
自我(存档片段)
Les Enfoirés, 15 ans d'Enfoirés
Les Enfoirés 2017 - 使命Enfoirés
Les Enfoirés 1997 - Le Zénith des Enfoirés