Jef - Jacques Brel

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Jef Lyrics

Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais arrête de pleurer
Comme ça devant tout le monde
Parce qu'une demi-vieille
Parce qu'une fausse blonde
T'a relaissé tomber
Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais tu sais que tu me fais honte
A sangloter comme ça
Bêtement devant tout le monde
Parce qu'une trois quarts putain
T'a claqué dans les mains
Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais tu fais honte à voir
Les gens se paient notre tête
Foutons le camp de ce trottoir
Allez viens Jef viens viens

Viens il me reste trois sous
On va aller se les boire
Chez la mère Françoise
Viens il me reste trois sous
Et si c'est pas assez
Ben il me restera l'ardoise
Puis on ira manger
Des moules et puis des frites
Des frites et puis des moules
Et du vin de Moselle
Et si t'es encore triste
On ira voir les filles
Chez la madame Andrée
Parait qu'y en a de nouvelles
On rechantera comme avant
On sera bien tous les deux
Comme quand on était jeunes
Comme quand c'était le temps
Que j'avais de l'argent

Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais arrête tes grimaces
Soulève tes cent kilos
Fais bouger ta carcasse
Je sais que t'as le cœur gros
Mais il faut le soulever
Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais arrête de sangloter
Arrête de te répandre
Arrête de répéter
Que t'es bon à te foutre à l'eau
Que t'es bon à te pendre
Non Jef t'es pas tout seul
Mais c'est plus un trottoir
ça devient un cinéma
Où les gens viennent te voir
Allez viens Jef viens viens

Viens il me reste trois sous
On va aller se les boire
Chez la mère Françoise
Viens il me reste trois sous
Et si c'est pas assez
Ben il me restera l'ardoise
Puis on ira manger
Des moules et puis des frites
Des frites et puis des moules
Et du vin de Moselle
Et si t'es encore triste
On ira voir les filles
Chez la madame Andrée
Parait qu'y en a de nouvelles
On rechantera comme avant
On sera bien tous les deux
Comme quand on était jeunes
Comme quand c'était le temps
Que j'avais de l'argent

Viens il me reste ma guitare
Je l'allumerai pour toi
Et on sera espagnols
Comme quand on était mômes
Même que j'aimais pas ça
T'imiteras le rossignol
Puis on se trouvera un banc
On parlera de l'Amérique
Où c'est qu'on va aller
Quand on aura du fric
Et si t'es encore triste
Ou rien que si t'en as l'air
Je te raconterai comment
Tu deviendras Rockfeller
On sera bien tous les deux
On rechantera comme avant
Comme quand on était beaux
Comme quand c'était le temps
D'avant qu'on soit poivrots

Allez viens Jef viens viens
Oui oui Jef oui viens

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Jacques Brel (8 April 1929 – 9 October 1978) was a Belgian singer and songwriter who composed and performed literate, thoughtful, and theatrical songs that generated a large, devoted following in Belgium and France initially, and later throughout the world. He was widely considered a master of the modern chanson. Although he recorded most of his songs in French, he became a major influence on English-speaking songwriters and performers such as David Bowie, Alex Harvey, Leonard Cohen, Marc Almond and Rod McKuen. English translations of his songs were recorded by many top performers in the United States, including Ray Charles, Judy Collins, John Denver, the Kingston Trio, Nina Simone, Frank Sinatra, Scott Walker, and Andy Williams. In French-speaking countries, Brel was also a successful actor, appearing in ten films. He also directed two films, one of which, Le Far West, was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1973. Jacques Brel has sold over 25 million records worldwide, and is the third best-selling Belgian recording artist of all time.

Brel was born on 8th April 1929 in Schaarbeek, a district of Brussels, and lived half of his life in Paris. He died of lung cancer on 9th October 1978 in Bobigny in the suburbs of Paris, and is buried in the Marquesas Islands.

Although the Brels spoke French, they were of Flemish descent, with some of the family originating from Zandvoorde, near Ieper. Brel's father was co-owner of a cardboard factory and Brel started his professional life at that firm, apparently destined to follow in his father's footsteps. However he had no interest in it, showing instead an interest in the arts, having joined the Catholic-humanist youth organisation Franche Cordée, where he did some singing and acting. At Franche Cordée he met Thérèse Michielsen ('Miche'), and they married in 1950.

In the early 1950s Brel achieved some minor success in Belgium, singing his own songs. A 78rpm record ("La foire"/"Il y a") was released as a result. From 1954 Brel seriously pursued a singing career. He quit his job and moved to Paris, writing music and singing in the city's cabarets and music-halls.. In January 1955 he supported in the Ancienne Belgique in Brussels the performances of the Belgian pop and variety pioneer Bobbejaan Schoepen. After some success his wife and daughters joined him from Belgium. By 1956 he was touring Europe and he recorded the song "Quand on n'a que l'amour", which brought him his first major recognition. He appeared in a show with Maurice Chevalier and Michel Legrand.

By the end of the 1950s Miche and Brel's three daughters moved to Brussels. He and his family led separate lives from then on. Under the influence of his friend Georges Pasquier ('Jojo') and pianists Gérard Jouannest and François Rauber, Brel's style changed. He was no longer a Catholic-humanist troubadour, but sang grimmer songs about love, death, and the struggle that is life. The music became more complex and his themes more diverse, exploring love ("Je t'aime", "Litanies pour un retour"), society ("Les singes", "Les bourgeois", "Jaurès") and spiritual concerns ("Le bon Dieu", "Dites, si c'était vrai", "Fernand"). His work is not limited to one style. He was as proficient in comic compositions ("Le lion", "Comment tuer l'amant de sa femme...") as in more emotional ones ("Voir un ami pleurer", "Fils de...", "Jojo"). He composed and recorded his songs almost exclusively in French, and is widely recognised in French-speaking countries as one of the best French-language composers of all time.

Brel himself occasionally included parts of his songs in Flemish (Dutch), one of the three official languages of Belgium, as in Marieke. He also recorded eight other Flemish versions of songs, such as Mijn vlakke land (Le plat Pays), Laat Me Niet Alleen (Ne me quitte pas), Rosa, De Burgerij (Les Bourgeois), and De Nuttelozen van de Nacht (Les paumés du petit matin). Since his own command of the language was poor, these were translated by Ernst van Altena, renowned translator of French song.

His attitude towards the Flemish was marked by a love of Flanders and the Flemish countryside, but a marked dislike of Flemish nationalism: he declared himself Flemish and presented himself to the world as a Flemish singer, but he also mocked rustic Flemish life with the comic song "Les flamandes". Later in his career he directed his political anger at the Flamingants; France Brel, his daughter, has been quoted as saying: "he was very Flemish. He believed in discipline, hard work, he was always punctual. Our family is Flemish in character in many ways, Jacques was proud of his Flemish blood."

"If I were king", Brel himself once said, "I would send all the Flemings to Wallonia and all the Walloons to Flanders for six months. Like military service. They would live with a family and that would solve all our ethnic and linguistic problems very fast. Because everybody's tooth aches in the same way, everybody loves their mother, everybody loves or hates spinach. And those are the things that really count."
Although France was Brel's "spiritual home" and he expressed contradictory statements about his native Belgium, some of his best compositions pay tribute to Belgium.

For twenty years he was a major star gaining recognition beyond French audiences. In 1973 he retreated to French Polynesia, remaining there until 1977 when he returned to Paris and recorded his well-received final album.

A heavy smoker, it was discovered in 1973 that Brel had lung cancer. He died in 1978 and was buried in Calvary Cemetery in Atuona, Hiva Oa, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia only a few yards away from painter Paul Gauguin. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Jacques Brel