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Charles Aznavour dit adieu à l'Amérique qui avait fait de lui une star (NY)

charles_aznavour_dit_adieu_lamerique_qui_avait_fait_de_lui_une_star_ny-azn1190.jpgAmérique qui avait fait de lui une star
Charles Aznavour dit adieu à l'Amérique qui avait fait de lui une star
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Published by bana2166- 09-19-06
news Charles Aznavour dit adieu à l'Amérique qui avait fait de lui une star (NY)

Charles Aznavour dit adieu à l'Amérique qui avait fait de lui une star
Charles Aznavour était à New York lundi soir pour un de ses derniers concerts américains, un adieu à un pays où il a chanté pendant 60 ans.
A 82 ans, le chanteur français tire sa révérence dans une vaste tournée: après l'Allemagne et New York, ce sera la Californie, avant le Japon en février puis l'Amérique latine fin 2007. Rare exception, la France, où il n'est pas question d'adieu dans l'immédiat.
Sous la voûte Art déco du majestueux Radio City Music Hall, l'homme aux innombrables standards a chanté lundi pour une des dernières fois en anglais: »You've got to learn» (»Il faut savoir»), »The old-fashioned way» (»Les plaisirs démodés»), »Take me along» (»Emmenez-moi») etc.
»Ah! Je n'arrive pas à trouver la bonne expression», dit-il à un moment donné, avec un bon anglais, au public dont son amie Liza Minnelli assise au 1er rang. »Je vous dirai ça la prochaine fois. Ah mais non, il n'y aura pas de prochaine fois».
»Il a 82 ans», explique son manager de toujours, Lévon Sayan. »Il a une forme exceptionnelle vocalement et physiquement. Mais on veut arrêter les langues étrangères. C'est devenu difficile de mémoriser les textes».
A en juger par un show new-yorkais ininterrompu de 2 heures, le chanteur a toujours la santé. Petit homme aux cheveux blancs, tout mince dans un costume noir sur décor noir, il a gardé une voix puissante, le swing intact, les gestes alertes. Seul un souci de retour de son le fait dérailler sur »No I could never forget» (»Non je n'ai pas oublié»).
Il chante aussi la vieillesse avec intensité: »Il faut boire jusqu'à l'ivresse sa jeunesse».
Mais la retraite totale n'est pas pour demain. Il vient de resigner avec EMI pour trois albums, dont l'un doit être enregistré en octobre à La Havane.
»Il veut donner une couleur différente», dit M. Sayan à l'AFP, à propos de cette expérience cubaine. Histoire de contrebalancer des textes toujours assez graves, qui parlent d'amour, d'écologie, de banlieues, d'immigrés.
A New York, il a dédié sa chanson »Un mort vivant» au journaliste américain Daniel Pearl, tué par des extrémistes islamistes au Pakistan en 2002.
A côté de ces chansons nouvelles, tout le reste cependant n'est que tubes, »Venise», »La Bohème»... Et le plus connu des Américains, »Yesterday When I was young» (»Hier Encore»).
Aznavour était venu à New York juste après la Guerre, avec Edith Piaf. Mais en 1963 il remplit seul le Carnegie Hall. Il est même dans les années 70 invité de Kermit la grenouille dans le Muppet Show. En 1998 encore il se produit à New York. Le San Francisco Chronicle parle aujourd'hui d'une »icône de l'ère Sinatra et Minnelli».
Lundi, des spectateurs hurlent »I love you Charles», même si leurs élans semblent déranger l'artiste. Les standing ovations se succèdent. Les flashes crépitent.
Dans la salle comble (6.000 personnes) où il devait jouer encore mardi, les Français sont là, y compris le footballeur installé à New York Youri Djorkaeff. Beaucoup d'Arméniens aussi, comme Harouk Takvorian, 37 ans: »Il est arménien, c'est une icône, et c'est sa dernière tournée».
Mais le monde entier semble représenté, notamment les seniors américains. »Je l'ai découvert il y a 40 ans à la télévision, et c'est mon 4e concert!,» dit Madeleine de Palma. »J'aime ses manières européennes», ajoute Patricia Morris.
»C'est son âme, sa présence, l'esprit des chansonniers», explique Berta Kemelman, une Russe de 70 ans installée à Brooklyn. »C'est un langage international». Leslie Heurtelou, Haïtien de New York, a toujours connu sa mère fan de ses disques: »Ces paroles directes, cette voix incroyable!»
»Je suis désolée qu'il arrête», se lamente Claudia Saboia, prof d'origine brésilienne. Pour cette fan de Brel et Bécaud, une époque s'en va: »Toute une philosophie de la vie».
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By bana2166 on 09-19-06, 10:22 PM
news NYTimes: At 82, Charles Aznavour Is Singing a Farewell That Could Last for Years

September 18, 2006
At 82, Charles Aznavour Is Singing a Farewell That Could Last for Years
By ALAN RIDING
PARIS, Sept. 17 ? At 82 Charles Aznavour is on his farewell tour, but don?t let anyone confuse this with retirement.
No, for this last practitioner of a decades-old musical tradition known as the chanson française (French song), the tour better resembles a slow lap of honor, one taking him to scores of cities around the world and, health permitting, that may last until 2010 or beyond.
?We?re in no hurry; we?re still young,? Mr. Aznavour said good-naturedly several weeks ago before embarking on an 10-city swing through North America, which includes dates in New York at Radio City Music Hall on Monday and Tuesday. ?There are some people who grow old and others who just add years. I have added years, but I am not yet old.?
As proof he claims with no little pride that his voice is in better shape than 30 years ago. He has just signed a three-record contract with EMI. He is still busily writing new songs about the travails of love and life. And, let?s face it, he doesn?t look his age: dapperly dressed, he seems as sure on his feet as he is quick in his repartee.
Nonetheless the plan is to say goodbye to fans in each city he visits this month. He has already been to Montreal, Ottawa, Seattle, San Francisco, Toronto and Washington. After his New York shows, Boston, Los Angeles and Saratoga, Calif., will complete his schedule.
?Later I?ll return to the cities I haven?t done, Philadelphia, Dallas, Miami and so on,? he explained. ?This is all part of the English-language tour: London ? that?s in the Royal Albert Hall ? and Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. I?ve already done Germany: 10 cities. Japan next year, then all of Latin America.?
Still, by bunching together many of the English-speaking cities, where half of his songs are usually performed in English, Mr. Aznavour is finally acknowledging his age.
?In the past I could mix languages,? he said, sitting in the offices of Éditions Raoul Breton, one of several music publishers he owns, before he began his current tour. ?My memory was better. I passed easily from language to language, Spanish, Italian, French, English. But I can?t do that any longer.? He tapped his head and laughed. ?Calma, calma, I?m 82.?
When he began, though, he was almost the youngest of the crooners who made the chanson française popular in the postwar years. And to his good fortune, it was Édith Piaf, the legendary ?little sparrow,? who took him under her wings: in time they came to enjoy what he calls ?une amitié amoureuse? ? an amorous friendship ? which, he said, ?means more than friendship and less than love.?
It was a time when the smoke-filled clubs and theaters of the Paris Left Bank were bursting with talent. Maurice Chevalier was already an international star, but new voices were gaining a following, among them Georges Brassens, Jacques Brel, Léo Ferré, Yves Montand, Gilbert Bécaud, Charles Trenet and Juliette Gréco. (Of these only Ms. Gréco is still alive and, at 79, very occasionally performing.)
Mr. Aznavour had one strong card. This short, wiry son of Armenian immigrants (his real surname is Aznavourian) had a talent for writing lyrics that echoed the language and sentiments of ordinary people. And long before his husky tenor became as recognizable as that of, say, Brassens or Bécaud, he won a place in their circle as a songwriter.
Even now, while best known around the world as a singer (he has also appeared in more than 50 French movies), Mr. Aznavour considers himself first and foremost a songwriter: he starts with the words, and only later does he or another composer add the melody and rhythm. For him the chanson française is quite simply the art of telling stories to music.
For material he has always counted on love and its pitfalls, but recent songs confirm that he is also ever-alert to what is topical.
?I don?t write stories like novels,? he said. ?I don?t invent anything. I bring language to existing facts and events. I read all the newspapers. I watch all the news programs on television. I was the first to write about social issues like homosexuality and the deaf. In my new record I write about unrest in the suburbs, about ecology. I find real subjects and translate them into song.?
One recent record, ?Le Voyage,? includes two songs about journalists: in ?La Critique,? he snipes at critics and concludes that, ?in the end, only the public is right?; and in ?Un Mort Vivant,? or ?A Living Death,? which he dedicated to Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal correspondent assassinated by Islamic extremists in Pakistan in 2002, Mr. Aznavour pays tribute to reporters who risk their lives while seeking the truth.
?What really matters is that you hear the text clearly,? he noted.
Now, reflecting on his long final bow, he feels confident that he will be best remembered by his songs. ?When a singer dies, only his records survive,? he said. ?But when I die, there are at least two songs which will continue to be played regularly in the United States: ?Yesterday When I Was Young? and ?She.? There will be no break because the songs exist. I will remain in the business.?
And he will do so all the more if a project under discussion in the United States and France comes to fruition: to create a stage show built entirely around his songs and modeled after ?Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris.?
So, still very much alive and well and living in Geneva, Mr. Aznavour could easily rest on his laurels. In France he is regularly voted one of the country?s 10 most popular personalities. In Armenia, the land of his forebears, where an Aznavour Museum is planned, he is warmly remembered for organizing help after a devastating earthquake that killed 45,000 people there in 1988.
But his farewell tour is also an excuse to get back on stage and show that he has not lost his touch as a performer extraordinaire. Then, after North America, he is to fly to Havana to make his next record with the Cuban musician Chucho Valdés. And he has already agreed to appear in a movie adaptation of Georges Simenon?s novel ?The Little Man from Archangel.?
Tomorrow evidently still beckons.
?Once I have done something,? he said conclusively, ?I think of something else. I never look back.?
Except, that is, when he claims a place in the Guinness Book of Records.
?I have been married to the same woman for 43 years,? he said with a smile, referring to his Swedish-born wife, Ulla, ?and, in my business, that?s a record.?
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