Clip réalisé par @panonerpan pour illustrer le morceau « Comment lui dire adieu » de @brumeparole et @marin__marie . Il figure sur la compilation « Hardie, 17 chansons autour de Françoise » sorti sur le label @lasouterraine le 11 juin 2025.
Ce clip, au décor simple et verdoyant, s’inspire du lien subtil que Françoise Hardy entretient avec la Nature. Dans son œuvre, le paysage devient souvent le miroir de ses émotions intérieures.
@jaj0_0
#FrançoiseHardy by Jean-Marie Périer
New profile picture for my Mastodon account (22/04/2025)!
This is Françoise Hardy, photographed by Angelo Frontoni, 1965.
#FrançoiseHardy Tous les garçons et les filles
#NowPlaying I am currently listening to Grand hôtel by #FrançoiseHardy from the album #Tantdebelles choses see #spotify https://open.spotify.com/track/0eQ4LaXSuLLp5kcHhl7vHj
#NowPlaying I am currently listening to Avec des si by #FrançoiseHardy from the album Quelques titres que je connais d'elle, Vol. 2 see #spotify https://open.spotify.com/track/5kpLC6e7xZ2Tjb1UmGAftb
J'adore Françoise Hardy.
Whoa, I've reached the 90s in my deep dive of Françoise Hardy's discography, and her Le Danger album thus far is my favorite. Totally different mood from the previous albums, exhibit A:
SpaceAce Sunday | Jacques Dutronc – Jacques Dutronc (1966, France)
The next album our dearly missed friend submitted to the project is number 1047 on The List.
As mentioned in our spotlight last week on Mission of Burma, I recently started a new listening project of going through entire discographies (well, studio albums) of artists, particularly those other Mastodonians have recommended. After Mission of Burma I went through Roxy Music’s discography, and then, as I was craving a different vibe from either of those two bands and wanted to listen to someone I wasn’t familiar with at all, I decided to start in on Françoise Hardy’s studio albums. All 32 of them. Wowzers. After listening to about 10 albums (and falling in love with Hardy), I started reading the Wikipedia entries on Hardy and each album, and realized that she had been married to Jacques Dutronc, whose self-titled 1966 album just happened to be our next SpaceAce pick. Funny how things go.
So, Jacques Dutronc, husband of Françoise Hardy. I would so have loved if SpaceAce had written this spotlight, I’d have loved to hear what he had to say about this dynamic duo. Like, the two met the year after this album, Dutronc’s first of many, came out, and Hardy was already 8 or 9 albums in. Can you imagine the amount of music flowing through that house?
Anyway, we’ll revisit Hardy in another spotlight as we have her self-titled 1971 album on The List. For now, I hope you’ll give this album a spin because it is fucking fantastic. Like Hardy, Dutronc was an important figure in the yé-yé movement, with this album being in the beat/garage rock genres (I think?), with maybe a touch of mod (think Bob Dylan meets the Beatles, but, you know, in French), plus whatever wonderful nonsense is going on in the second-last track “La compapade”. So nice, I listened to it twice.
Thanks, dear SpaceAce, for leading us towards such a great rabbit hole. I may even figure out what exactly yé-yé is soon.
I dare anyone who hasn't really listened to Françoise Hardy before to try and make it through like 5 albums without falling in love with her. Or, just try to get through this cover.