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Vocal Coach reacts to Jacques Brel - Amsterdam (Live officiel Les Adieux à l’Olympia 1966)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2023
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    Vocal Coach reacts to reaction to analyses analyzes analysis of breaks down Jacques Brel - Amsterdam (Live officiel Les Adieux à l’Olympia 1966)
    Original Video without interruption: • Jacques Brel - Amsterd...
    Check out Jacques Brel here: jacquesbrel.be/en
    Jacques Romain Georges Brel was a Belgian singer and actor who composed and performed theatrical songs. He generated a large, devoted following-initially in Belgium and France, but later throughout the world. He is considered a master of the modern chanson.
    "Amsterdam" is a song by Jacques Brel. It combines a powerful melancholic crescendo with a rich poetic account of the exploits of sailors on shore leave in Amsterdam. Musically, it takes its base melody line from the melody of the English folk song Greensleeves.
    Songwriters: Jacques Brel
    Performed by Jacques Brel
    Genres: Chanson, French Pop
    Origin: Schaerbeek, Brussels, Belgium
    Date
    Les Adieux à l’Olympia 1966
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Social Media
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    #vocalcoach #jacquesbrel #amsterdam #frenchmusic #greensleeves #livemusic #reaction #bethroars

Комментарии • 217

  • @valaquenta220
    @valaquenta220 Год назад +194

    As a French speaker, I can confirm : the lyrics in French are incredibly raw, emotional, and nothing can prepare you for this song when you're never heard it before.

    • @ikeettgaming
      @ikeettgaming Год назад +15

      The act & the voice are exelent but the lirics are really the big talent of Jaques Brel.

    • @tntguy7915
      @tntguy7915 11 месяцев назад +2

      I can confirm. it my favorite

    • @DanBlabbers
      @DanBlabbers 9 месяцев назад +7

      Brel said he had to sing his songs because nobody else would

    • @Nico3039
      @Nico3039 8 месяцев назад

      c'est vrai...

    • @marct8160
      @marct8160 7 месяцев назад +1

      Selon moi c'est une des meilleurs chansons Francaises

  • @moinechartreux
    @moinechartreux 9 месяцев назад +68

    There is a concept called "Crescendo Brelien", which is a dramatic progression in writing and performance, because Brel used to write his songs this way.
    You can clearly hear it in Amsterdam: the beginning is really soft, but the more the song progresses, the louder and dramatic it becomes

  • @BennoWitter
    @BennoWitter 11 месяцев назад +74

    Brel is by far the most expressive singer ever.

    • @charlieosstyn
      @charlieosstyn 3 месяца назад

      No he is one of them and that same period had one even more famous, her name is Edith Piaf, who sang this song first ....!

    • @armageddfix
      @armageddfix 3 месяца назад +1

      edith piaf never sang this song, it's a brel song written by himself

  • @minik746
    @minik746 11 месяцев назад +57

    Brel was the greatest performer, the master. After all these years, nobody can perform like him. He is unique. I have all Brel's 33 rpm vinyl records, a treasure that my son will inherit and after him my grand-daughter.

    • @Eduardo-Ferreira1982
      @Eduardo-Ferreira1982 11 месяцев назад +4

      Brel was the greatest poet and interpreter this world has known.
      (sorry, Dylan)

    • @thomasmichestinson
      @thomasmichestinson 8 месяцев назад +6

      I've seen countless people with even better voices doing covers of Brel's songs, and yet none of them give me the chills and emotions like he does. There is something so true, so personal, so deep when he sings, even decades later you feel like he is talking directly to you. Just seeing his eyes moves me for some reason, he carried so much pain and so much humanity in his soul, we are really blessed that he decided to share it in his music. In my opinion he was the perfect artist in the sense that he was doing everything with his heart, with a meaning, and without ever trying to deceive his audience.

    • @Shaumbra999
      @Shaumbra999 7 месяцев назад +3

      He was -pretty much- My neighbor (few streets around the corner)!

    • @crae_zi4543
      @crae_zi4543 4 месяца назад

      @@Shaumbra999you lived in Monaco?

    • @charlieosstyn
      @charlieosstyn 3 месяца назад

      Untrue = false, he was not the only one, he was competing with the likes of Editd Piaf, Je ne regrette rien , here is a rare version of her most famous song, ruclips.net/video/rzy2wZSg5ZM/видео.htmlsi=uT910GMCFzoaQzBy and Jacques sang many of her songs ....

  • @Moosh50
    @Moosh50 9 месяцев назад +24

    There are artists, and then there are Artists. Brel was an Artist.

  • @BethRoars
    @BethRoars  Год назад +5

    I HAVE AN ALBUM COMING OUT! And I have just realised my first cover on Spotify. Let me know what you think! And follow me on Spotify to hear the album as soon as it comes out. open.spotify.com/track/6qfvKbg6ukHJOGykx2MARB?si=8a2fa85792b14d15

    • @intolerant_left
      @intolerant_left Год назад +1

      Another case where the cover version overtakes the original! Sounds amazing!

    • @michaeldeeley5181
      @michaeldeeley5181 Год назад +1

      Wow, what a hauntingly beautiful version

    • @andrespfalconer
      @andrespfalconer Год назад

      Thank you for granting my wish :-)

  • @13letras
    @13letras Год назад +26

    These days I picked up Charles Aznavour to marathon. I didn't remember (or had never noticed before) how good he was: songs, lyrics, acting, stage presence, a complete artist

  • @anaelhonings8683
    @anaelhonings8683 Год назад +79

    Dear Beth, Brel was singing in French but was actually Belgian 🙂
    Rrrrolling the R's was kind of an old tradition in French chanson (songs) because the real French speaking "R" (that we actually don't roll) was less clear to hear back then when the quality of recording was lower or when singers had to fill an entire theatre without microphone or amplification. This is why you can hear for instance Edith Piaf rrrrolling the R's a lot, as most of singers did before the 50's/60's.
    PS: If you want to know about what he was singing, Bowie covered the song in English in a quite litteral version.

    • @LetsChillPage
      @LetsChillPage Год назад +3

      Hello,
      Nevertheless, he spent most of his life in France, his adopted homeland from 1953 to 1978, when he died in Bobigny.
      Peace, folks. ☮😉

    • @pouffsie
      @pouffsie Год назад +14

      @@LetsChillPage spending time in location X does not undo his nationality, origin or major focus of his work which is that his songs are heavily planted in the Belgian, Flemish and Dutch cultures and society - a focus no random Frenchman would give, have or seek unless a connection already would be in place. As the song itself being about a city in "les pays bas" bare witness to this statement, which is why he could flawlessly switch to singing in Flemish when he so wanted to. His Flemish connection can not and should not be understated, not the least as the role he has for the Belgian communities.

    • @synkeyssynk4627
      @synkeyssynk4627 Год назад +2

      @@pouffsie Still sing in french

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@synkeyssynk4627 Which is one of the languages used in Belgium

    • @DaiBei
      @DaiBei 11 месяцев назад +4

      He started to make a song about the port of Antwerp, but the word Amsterdam suited better than Anvers, the translation of of Antwerpen. @@pouffsie

  • @estranhokonsta
    @estranhokonsta Год назад +14

    Jacque Brel. Seeing him now brings some emotions of nostalgia, and some more.
    I spent so many many hours hearing his songs when i was younger.
    He was indeed a great performer, but to me he was much more than that.
    He was a great poet of human condition. A poet so expressive that he could share his vision of the world like few others.
    His songs and his singing helped me understand a little better this human existence when i was totally lost in my illusory rationality and begin to accept that emotion (even the "bad" ones) was an essential part of intelligence when trying to understand this apparent chaos we live in.

  • @lifelover515
    @lifelover515 Год назад +28

    What a treat to see you react to this powerful and fascinating performer, much overlooked these days. His many magnificent songs are as masterful as the performances - 'chanson' won't quite do - he is impossible to classify into a genre - he's just Brel. Your points about his dynamics are perceptive and enlightening. We lost him to cancer way too early. You can visit his grave in the Seychelles if you're ever out that way. Go girl, one of your Betht (groan).

    • @sandrinecozic7214
      @sandrinecozic7214 Год назад +1

      Méconnu de nos jours....ce sont des incultes, désolée

    • @daniellegrand4566
      @daniellegrand4566 9 месяцев назад +1

      He died in the Marquesas Islands for the rest, I'm just OK

    • @lifelover515
      @lifelover515 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@daniellegrand4566 Thanks Danielle, I stand corrected.

    • @daniellegrand4566
      @daniellegrand4566 9 месяцев назад

      @@lifelover515 And my name is "Daniel" Thanks.
      🙂

  • @michel2075
    @michel2075 Месяц назад +2

    Un très grand monsieur. Il vibre ses chansons, il vit ses chansons. Et quels textes...

  • @linkianajones
    @linkianajones Год назад +13

    Hi Beth, Jacques lived what he sang. He was an actor as well as a singer, and his performances on stage showed that.
    Among his other hits, I'd recommend "La valse à mille temps" for its rhythmic crescendo, and "Ces gens-là" for both its filmic and stage performances.

    • @daniellegrand4566
      @daniellegrand4566 9 месяцев назад

      " Ces gens là " Ecellent choice
      ruclips.net/video/O6MGGh8WUco/видео.html&ab_channel=InaChansons

  • @musashimiyamoto586
    @musashimiyamoto586 3 месяца назад +3

    I think a simple analysis doesn't do justice to this extradordinary musical powerhouse. And I also don't think simply concentrating on certain body movements or singing techniques is going to reveal that. To know Brel is to listen to him, read and understand the lyrics, cause they are such an integral part of his work. Only then can you fully comprehend the immense insight he had in the human condition, e.g. old or simple people (Les Vieux and Ces gens-la), certain types of societal elements (Les flamands, les bourgeois, les bigottes) or deeply personal themes (Ne me quitte pas, Le chanson de Jacky). He to me was the proverbial Don Quixote come to life. His gangly clown-like figure, the suit on which the sleeves would ride up always making it seem to short, his incredibly expressive face, they way he almost shyly transformed all things into sound and words and gestures. He always spoke truth to life and never exempted himself from it. Watching him way back then shows you what a tour de force he was and that there probably wil never ever be anyone else of his stature. I am so grateful for his words and music and I will carry them with me until the end, when the silver pendulum of life that accompanies us all will finally stop.

  • @nimocash3535
    @nimocash3535 5 месяцев назад +3

    I know for english, american for an incredible performance you want to hear big voice, people who keep notes for a long time or a show but for french it's when you sing with your soul and your guts.

  • @TimGibson-qp8tn
    @TimGibson-qp8tn Год назад +2

    Thanks, Beth, for the very informative and instructive explanation about the the body aspect of singing. That was a very powerful performance by Jacque Brel. Took French for years but I could never ever sing as well as he does in French or anything other language in a million years!

  • @alexmani6005
    @alexmani6005 4 месяца назад +2

    im a sailor in the north Atlantic and North Sea. he perfectly captures the energy of sailing in a winter storm

  • @johnhmaloney
    @johnhmaloney Год назад +8

    A brilliant performance. His delivery reminded me a bit of Joe Strummer from The Clash, I wonder if Jacques Brel was an influence on him.

  • @alanrobert001
    @alanrobert001 Год назад +7

    "Amsterdan" est très belle, à côté de "Ces gens là", c'est ma chanson préférée de Brel.
    "Amsterdan" is beautiful. Beside "Ces gens là" it's my favorite Brel's song.

  • @michaeldeeley5181
    @michaeldeeley5181 Год назад +10

    Chanson music is so emotive. I may not understand the lyrics, I don't speak French, but just closing your eyes and letting it waft over you is a great experience

    • @Artaxo
      @Artaxo Год назад +1

      Well, we can start with one word. Chanson means music! So, technically speaking, you can say to your partner that you're gonna put on some chanson and play black metal.

    • @mecha-sheep7674
      @mecha-sheep7674 6 месяцев назад

      Chanson means "song". The french word for music is musique. @@Artaxo

  • @fredschepers5149
    @fredschepers5149 8 месяцев назад +3

    Arguably the first known European rapper as well!
    Don't know if you reacted to "Vesoul" or "La Valse a Mille Temps", but I think he raps as fast, if not faster, than Eminem ☺️
    Nice reaction to one of the greatest (but probably not that well known) performers in the world of music.
    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🌷

  • @begaydocrime5719
    @begaydocrime5719 Год назад +4

    If it feels harsh and uncomfortable, that's on purpose. He's not singing in a clean or pretty way, but it _is_ beautiful and absolutely art. The lyrics are liek that as well: an extremely poetic description of something harsh and sometimes gross. It's fascinating to see.

  • @mcasualjacques
    @mcasualjacques 10 месяцев назад +2

    i liked most the line "There are sailors who sleep like banners, along the dreary banks, at the first light of dawn, In the thick heat of the oceanic languors" it's all visual and more

  • @dariajustdaria2292
    @dariajustdaria2292 Год назад +6

    He was such an Artist, truly remarkable!

  • @trorisk
    @trorisk 2 месяца назад +1

    When you talk about biting words. He was friends with Catherine Sauvage (she sang lot's of Léo Ferré's song) who helped him get started on stage. Brel said of her that "she doesn't sing, she bites".

  • @BlockyFacts
    @BlockyFacts Год назад +3

    My top 10 Chansonnier:
    1. Jacques Brel
    2. Serge Reggiani
    3 Mouloudji
    4. Charles Aznavour
    5. Yves Montand
    6. Jean Ferrat
    7. George Brassens
    8. Serge Gainsbourg
    9. Edith Piaf
    10. Charles Trenet
    I’m 23 years old now and I started listening to Chansons when I was 19.
    The poetry and passion in the music of the genre Chansons is so beautiful! ❤

  • @ailleurd
    @ailleurd 7 месяцев назад +3

    He is belge , (I'm french) Brel is genious,.He is one of my favorite singer....

  • @ScaleParasitoid
    @ScaleParasitoid 8 месяцев назад +1

    I discover so beautiful perfomances through the spectrum of my interest for the vocal world. And through your selection, this beautiful perfomances reach out to me and that's really special! I am french and I love, love music. I dig a lot, especially old french music, but I never find out about this perfomance. I want to dig more in the art of Jacques Brel, I barely now him and what he did, even if I am surrounded by his influance in my country.

  • @almm8759
    @almm8759 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hello, j 'espère que tu n'es pas passé à coté de toute l’émotion que cette chanson dégage, par l’énergie, l'authenticité de Brel, par cette fatale histoire de marin .

  • @marcvandenbroecke331
    @marcvandenbroecke331 9 месяцев назад +9

    Brel wrote his songs himself so is not based on another song !

    • @claudiechassaing4000
      @claudiechassaing4000 7 месяцев назад +4

      The music is inspired by Greenleeves. Les moulins de mon cœur are the music of Auf dem Wasser zu singen of Schubert, listen piano version, the left hand, not the lieder. Gainsbourg take themes of Chopin, Dvorak, Tchaikovski. It's not a problem. Is this a good song ? Yes it is.

    • @williamthelast1
      @williamthelast1 11 дней назад

      All musics, all songs, are inspired by other musics, other songs. That the road of life.

  • @sergiosum2274
    @sergiosum2274 4 месяца назад +1

    I would love to say your remarks are quite refreshing, from someone that do not speak French. I never think of the fact that body movement or opening up a rib cage or even toes can affect the diagram, or the way that consonnes are pronounced (those /b/, /k/, /g/ that explosent) can add to the dynamique of interpretation. What I would like to add is Brel does here is what French expression would say "habiter la chanson", or "habiter la scène" -- maybe a translation of living or incarner a song and on stage. He emits certain type of aura (émettre une aura), a way of "je-ne-sais-quoi" de fascination, that can be mysterious. When we think of charisma (le charisme), it can be "ineffable" (that is, cannot be explained by language). To return to the point of départ, your observations help to explain this form of "le charisme" that can be not linked to the langage or words. P.S. -- he is a poet, I think the text is something special. P.P.S. -- What Japanese would say this song a "kamigakari"-- that is what god express her will through someone so that a person can perform so well. Quite poetic I found.

  • @thibauthanson7670
    @thibauthanson7670 Месяц назад

    I had no idea you did French songs, and what's more, you're sampling Belgium's pool of talents :p

  • @yvesclepkens242
    @yvesclepkens242 Год назад +9

    Leo Ferré was a great singer too. His song "Avec le temps" make me almost cry every time..

  • @Meine.Postma
    @Meine.Postma Год назад +8

    I love Jacques Brel!

  • @antivanti
    @antivanti Год назад +1

    It's humbling to think that even though he's clearly one of the great performers of all time the reason he retired was that "he no longer wanted to battle against vomit-inducing stage fright"

  • @Mickael_
    @Mickael_ Год назад +5

    So do you know too "Ne me quittes pas" or "Ces gens là" ?

  • @tejw2012
    @tejw2012 Год назад +1

    Thanks for that. I've long adored this performance, which is really a possession, as we are transported to the fetid, visceral docks. The YT version I know ends before the lights come up and cutting at this point freezes you in a moment of profound finality - beyond this point what can be said? The only comparable moment I know of is Prince launcing his guitar skyward (and seeming to never return to earth) as the culmination of his blistering performance of Harrison's While My Guitar Gently Weeps.

  • @williamthelast1
    @williamthelast1 Год назад +1

    Merci Beth !!! I wish this Jacquot should be one of my close friends !! He sings love like if that was a battle !! Tremendous !!! The one and only best Francophone singer.❤❤❤❤❤❤😢😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @legitor513
    @legitor513 Год назад +2

    I should have suscribed a long time ago, such good analysises. Done :)

  • @glenngastonjonsson7954
    @glenngastonjonsson7954 Год назад +3

    Thanks! Belgian Brel rocked.

  • @Cradle1scot
    @Cradle1scot 2 месяца назад +1

    Jacques was superb. He did a song that David Bowie covered called My Death. There was a singer called Tony Mills who I believe did an even better cover than Bowie. His name is Tony Mills. It’s quite an extraordinary vocal range this guy has. Here is his version
    ruclips.net/video/14fXXwRnU7o/видео.htmlsi=MzZ8p_QCdXLvG59U

  • @oscararzate7956
    @oscararzate7956 Год назад +2

    Que canción tan melancólica. Con ese acento francés y un final épico bien Beth 👏👏🍀🍀

  • @Funktastic_Ed
    @Funktastic_Ed Год назад +2

    Intention, and intensity, you're not just singing music, you're singing words, you've got to believe what you sing, else you're just a singing liar.
    It's not just about technic, it's not just method, it's about what it means to you to sing this particular song.
    Many old times singers have lessons to be learn.
    See "Ces gens là" another song from Jacques BRel, available with translated lyrics.

  • @carloscurtyjr2146
    @carloscurtyjr2146 Год назад +2

    Hello Beth! I suggest you react to Ney Matogrosso, a legendary singer from Brazil, performing "O Mundo é um Moinho". I'm sure you'll love it. Best regards from Brazil!

  • @mcasualjacques
    @mcasualjacques 10 месяцев назад +1

    a lot of famous singers covered it. Edith Piaf, Jacques Brel, David Bowie, John Denver, Lara Fabian and Isabelle Boulay. It takes courage to cover a song like that in France or Belgium because ... well covers and comparisons

  • @carolmartin4413
    @carolmartin4413 Год назад +1

    Le Moribond was translated and lyric revised by Rod McKuen....it became Seasons in the Sun...a very popular song performed by McKuen in the 1960's. Very moving rendition that is still on tape.

  • @Kelva21
    @Kelva21 3 месяца назад +1

    Brel is one of a Belgian Pearl that's incredible.

  • @RealDiehl99
    @RealDiehl99 Год назад +3

    Scott Walker made remakes of some of Brel's songs. He is also a talented vocalists.

    • @Nick-Gye
      @Nick-Gye 2 месяца назад

      Including this song

    • @RealDiehl99
      @RealDiehl99 2 месяца назад

      @@Nick-Gye Cool! I haven't heard this one covered by Walker. Thanks!

  • @jonathanpietquin2253
    @jonathanpietquin2253 11 месяцев назад +2

    We have great artists in Belgium Jacque Brel and Lara Fabian are the perfect example

  • @barfieuhorsain7273
    @barfieuhorsain7273 8 месяцев назад +2

    you are moved but you don"t speak French
    imagine if you spoke French...
    goose bumps

  • @turriddu6421
    @turriddu6421 2 месяца назад

    This song was translated in English by Mort Schumann and is one of the best of David Bowie.

  • @jorgeantoniotorrespadilla839
    @jorgeantoniotorrespadilla839 3 месяца назад

    I love this singer. Please react to "ce gens ca" (or something like that). The lyrics are mind-blowing. Greetings from Peru

  • @ildefonsobenitez6624
    @ildefonsobenitez6624 Год назад +4

    Un immense chanteur

  • @tombrearton3435
    @tombrearton3435 Год назад +1

    John Denver, of all people, performed an hilarious cover of this song in several of his concerts (in English, of course).

  • @LetsChillPage
    @LetsChillPage Год назад

    Hello,
    The rolled "R" remained used for a very long time in the French language; we still rolled the "R" in Paris at the start of the 20ᵉ century and until the 50s, but of course, in a less pronounced way than some singers did.
    Before, almost all of France rolled the "R."
    Gradually, from north to south, this habit ended up being lost, even if in the southwest; until the 70s, this tradition was perpetuated.
    Depending on where the "R" is placed, a guttural sound still accompanies the "R" pronunciation in contemporary French, especially when set in the first letters of a word. But, it's lost as soon as it is placed in the last letters of the word. We have the perfect example with "croire" or "retour" (believe, come-back). It is guttural as soon as it takes place after a consonant : "Apprendre," "être," "sombre," etc. (Learn, be, dark).
    Peace, folks. ☮😉

  • @veritasman
    @veritasman Месяц назад

    If you can learn french language... I guarantee you will be addicted to the Great Artist Jacques Brel

  • @SanderMom
    @SanderMom Год назад +2

    Hi Beth, such a beautiful song! David Bowie did an awesome version in English in his early years. You should really check it out!

    • @alnath01
      @alnath01 6 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed

  • @bbiwy3970
    @bbiwy3970 8 месяцев назад +1

    Grand Jacques était tellement énorme !
    Pas étonnant que les anglophones se penchent sur son cas !

  • @micade2518
    @micade2518 2 месяца назад

    He is in his retirement years indeed: Jacques Brel (sadly) died in 1978!

  • @thearab59
    @thearab59 Год назад +1

    It's exhausting watching Jacques Brel!

  • @cellevangiel5973
    @cellevangiel5973 4 месяца назад

    That was his last performance as a singer, his adieu in the Paris Olympia. But he can keep you busy as he wrote 80 songs.
    He was always fully engaged in his songs and I think he had enough, so he stopped, just like that.

  • @sebastiengross7849
    @sebastiengross7849 6 месяцев назад

    Beyond the vocal performance this is also a theatrical performance. All the voice and body language suit to the lyrics. Of course you have to understand them. The song starts with a nice painting of Amsterdam (soft voice and static body) after each verses the voice becomes more rocky and the body moves much more to finish with a full disgusted picture of Amsterdam Harbour.

  • @intolerant_left
    @intolerant_left Год назад +2

    Did you ever get into the yé-yé genre during your French kick? I found it recently and am constantly returning to it

  • @chourineur9250
    @chourineur9250 Год назад +2

    Good choice...le grand JACQUES ! 👍

  • @SonOfBaraki359
    @SonOfBaraki359 10 месяцев назад

    It was (and maybe still is) the closing song of my student bar

  • @levvellene570
    @levvellene570 Год назад +1

    I only learned about him through David Bowie's cover on his Pinups album. Of course, after that I did sort of spread my interest in music all over, and I still have no idea what so many French artists make sound so good! Still, this is one of my ever favorite songs in Bowie's version! :)
    Do NOT listen to French accordion-based music, you may never get out unchanged! There, you are warned...

  • @DanBlabbers
    @DanBlabbers 5 месяцев назад

    Are you telling me you aren’t gonna listen to the lyrics??!?! Brel said he sang his songs because nobody else would

  • @capudiovu2a665
    @capudiovu2a665 6 месяцев назад +1

    Brel was not an author but a poet. He played as much with the meaning of words as with their sound. He mastered this to perfection.
    Below ⤵️ is a translation of the lyrics.

  • @fabmetenier8428
    @fabmetenier8428 Год назад +1

    Ces gens là by MR Brel
    Amazing performance

  • @cellevangiel5973
    @cellevangiel5973 10 месяцев назад

    You have the French, rolling R, but he accentuates it. And being a good poet he collected words with R in the text which make the "R"aw sound.

  • @NakedPigeon
    @NakedPigeon Год назад

    There were many singers that could sing better than Brel, but there weren't many that could tell a story like him

  • @patrick86806
    @patrick86806 Год назад +1

    ÉPIQUE! ICONIQUE! CLASSIQUE!

  • @kotoal
    @kotoal Год назад +1

    Brel for ever ❤

  • @charlieosstyn
    @charlieosstyn 3 месяца назад

    Did you know your fav was a born a Flemish Lion, I bet you dont, look up his song, named Marieke, a surprise awaits you when he sings in his mother tongue which is not French!!!!! You should watch these with English subs, to understand why I said this ....

  • @jimmydeschrijvere721
    @jimmydeschrijvere721 6 месяцев назад

    ❤ reminder that Brel was Flemish, the rrrrrr is in our'e dialect.

  • @angelvelher
    @angelvelher Год назад +2

    Es una de las mejores canciones en la historia de la música.
    gracias.
    React to Julieta Venegas.

  • @capudiovu2a665
    @capudiovu2a665 6 месяцев назад

    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who sing
    Of the dreams that haunt them
    Off the coast of Amsterdam
    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who sleep
    Like flags
    Along the gloomy banks
    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who die
    Full of beer and drama
    At the first light
    But in the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who are born
    In the thick heat
    Of the ocean languors
    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who eat
    On tablecloths too white
    Dripping fish
    They show you their teeth
    To bite into fortune
    To unhook the moon
    To devour the shrouds
    And it smells of cod
    Right to the heart of the chips
    That their big hands invite
    To come back for more, then they get up laughing
    In a stormy noise
    They zip up their flies and go out belching
    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who dance
    Rubbing their bellies
    On the bellies of the women
    And they turn and they dance
    Like spit suns
    In the torn sound
    Of a rancid accordion
    They twist their necks
    To better hear themselves laugh
    Until all of a sudden the accordion expires
    Then with a solemn gesture, then with a proud look
    They bring back their bastards to the full light
    In the port of Amsterdam
    There are sailors who drink
    And who drink and drink again
    And who drink again
    They drink to the health
    Of the whores of Amsterdam
    Of Hamburg or elsewhere
    Finally they drink to the ladies
    Who give them their pretty bodies
    Who give them their virtue
    For a piece of gold
    And when they have drunk well
    They plant their noses in the sky
    They blow their noses in the stars
    They piss like I cry
    On the unfaithful women
    In the port of Amsterdam
    In the port of Amsterdam

  • @thepostapocalyptictrio4762
    @thepostapocalyptictrio4762 Год назад

    Great!! Absolutely great!!

  • @fredichon
    @fredichon Год назад +6

    « This song is about sailors in Amsterdam » is not quite accurate, nor is this his best rendition of this song.
    This is first and foremost a song about a man who was cheated on, the whole Amsterdam part is just the build up and the big reveal comes in the last sentence : « and they pee as much as I cry over unfaithful women ».
    You should probably give a listen to Damien Saez ‘s « Putains vous m’aurez plus » which explores the same theme.

    • @reddragonready
      @reddragonready Год назад

      Disagree..that end line is not the subject of the song but him comparing, unfavorably, his own weakness to the strength and pride of the sailors the song is actually about

    • @fredichon
      @fredichon Год назад +1

      @@reddragonready Sorry but no. Why? Because this song is negatively connoted through and through : « drab, drama, paunch, rancid » etc.
      These sailors are born in the city and die in it too. In the meantime they just sleep, eat with no table manners, they belch, they fart (a pun on tempest in French), they dance unappropriately, get drunk, have paid sex and pee. They’re not the topic of the song, but merely illustrate the derelict state of people within the city, whose « dreams that haunt them » remain « at large ».
      The repetition « in Amsterdam’s harbour » reflects this feeling of entrapment. People here have lost their purpose : Amsterdam is a den of iniquity where men sully natural beauty to the point that they even blow their noses in the stars.
      In the same way, the singer also interestingly evokes women : they’re the birth givers at the beginning, then they’re women, then ladies, and then prostitutes which ties in with his own experience : unfaithful women. (One could argue the mention of cod, which is a synonym for a low-life woman in French, would add to that list). Finally the Brellian crescendo accentuates the spiral into despair and precedes the big reveal : he is different because he’s the only one who suffers.

    • @warb635
      @warb635 10 месяцев назад

      Also Amsterdam has 3 syllables, compared to Anvers (Antwerp), which has only 2...

  • @alexandredujardin9783
    @alexandredujardin9783 4 месяца назад

    He is a belgian singer firsttt 🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪

  • @wakledodd
    @wakledodd Год назад +1

    The passion!!!!

  • @PM1995DERENNES
    @PM1995DERENNES 4 месяца назад

    Ce jeu. Cette voix.inemitable

  • @javla2485
    @javla2485 9 месяцев назад +2

    it feels illegal to put Brel's emotion on pause...

  • @peterang6912
    @peterang6912 5 месяцев назад

    Scott Walker and David Bowie did a english version of this song...

  • @samiryahiaoui
    @samiryahiaoui 7 месяцев назад

    Greatest performer ever.

  • @justsceptic3085
    @justsceptic3085 5 месяцев назад

    "and they piss like i cry on the unfaithfull women.."gosh!

  • @stefanrouyer3431
    @stefanrouyer3431 4 месяца назад

    INA has a good ,very good version from him

  • @eloifauvarque146
    @eloifauvarque146 6 месяцев назад

    Hey, I’ve just discovered your RUclips channel, I love it ! Can we suggest you some songs to analyse ? Thanks 🙏

  • @abdullahpwalrabudah735
    @abdullahpwalrabudah735 6 месяцев назад

    Jack Brel is not France he’s from Belgium and sang with a Belge accent.

  • @sebtao74
    @sebtao74 10 месяцев назад +1

    Without english lyrics, you unfortunately missing out of 80% of this song. The force is not only the interprestation but it's mainly the speech.

  • @gillescoin2374
    @gillescoin2374 9 месяцев назад

    Fantastic ! But of course, now you have to do Avec le temps de Ferré... many more tears... 😯

  • @francismagnier7477
    @francismagnier7477 6 месяцев назад

    I am french. Watch this video "c'est gens là"

  • @starforce224
    @starforce224 5 месяцев назад

    Les pauses piles aux meilleurs moments gâchent le plaisir

  • @odlenny
    @odlenny 2 месяца назад

    Fun fact : he hated this song, and this recording is the only one he made, there is no studio version

  • @cracboumhu1567
    @cracboumhu1567 Месяц назад

    Bise Beth.

  • @ponfed
    @ponfed Год назад

    I ask this in all respect. How is you're french? Cause is word play and just his raw émotion... it comes through really...

  • @dr.winstonoboogie7302
    @dr.winstonoboogie7302 Год назад

    David Bowie did an English version of this and La Mort in the early 70s!

  • @Godbooteringword
    @Godbooteringword Год назад

    Thank you 🙏

  • @louisrobitaille9384
    @louisrobitaille9384 9 месяцев назад

    An interesting fact is that Brel never recorded this song. The only version available is the live version you are reacting to.

  • @TheMarkvanes
    @TheMarkvanes 9 месяцев назад

    There is a version in dutch.

  • @Noitacitsamal
    @Noitacitsamal 7 месяцев назад

    for me its the best version of amsterdam do you havea link ? its quite difficult to get