The original French language song was La goualante du pauvre Jean - TopicsExpress



          

The original French language song was La goualante du pauvre Jean (The Ballad of Poor John), with music by Marguerite Monnot and words by René Rouzaud. Edith Piaf had one of her biggest hits with the original French version. The song was adapted by American songwriter Jack Lawrence in 1954, and he wrote English lyrics, which are considerably different from the French. The English-language title arises in part from a misinterpretation of the French title, as pauvre Jean was taken for the same-sounding pauvres gens, which translates as poor people. Lawrences lyrics, which pronounce Paris in the French style, as PaREE, are seldom heard. Most of the popular recordings of the song in the English-speaking world have been instrumentals. A recording of the tune by Les Baxters orchestra (Capitol Records catalog number 3336, with the flip side Theme from Helen of Troy) was a number-one hit on the Billboard chart in the US in 1956: for four weeks on the Best Sellers in Stores chart, for six weeks on the Most Played by Jockeys and Hot 100 charts, and for three weeks on the Most Played on Jukeboxes chart. This recording was also released in Australia by Capitol under catalog number CP-1044. This version of the song was also the last song to reach number one before Elvis Presleys Heartbreak Hotel topped the chart. Baxters version featured strings, brass, a wordless chorus, tinkling percussion, finger snapping, and a group of whistlers.
Posted on: Sat, 18 Oct 2014 04:46:17 +0000

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