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Ma jeunesse fout le camp...

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Ma jeunesse fout le camp…
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1967
RecordedParis, France
Studio Pye, London, United Kingdom
GenreFrench pop
Length31:30
LanguageFrench
LabelDisques Vogue
ProducerAsparagus Production:
  • Françoise Hardy
  • Jacques Wolfsohn
  • Léon Cabat
Françoise Hardy chronology
La maison où j'ai grandi
(1966)
Ma jeunesse fout le camp…
(1967)
En anglais
(1968)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Ma jeunesse fout le camp... is the seventh studio album by French singer-songwriter Françoise Hardy, released in November 1967 on Disques Vogue. The title is very idiomatic, but it in English its general meaning is 'My youth is slipping away'.

The album was released halfway between her initial years in the yé-yé phenomenon and her more singer-songwriter albums like La question,[2] and has been described as "her farewell to the yéyé years."[3]

Track list

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Except as noted, words and music were written by Françoise Hardy, and she is accompanied by the Charles Blackwell orchestra.[4]

  1. "Ma jeunesse fout le camp" – 3:05
    Lyrics and music written by: Guy Bontempelli
    First performed by: Michèle Arnaud, 1962
  2. "Viens là" – 2:25
  3. "Mon amour adieu" – 2:20
    Music written by: Hasell[5]
  4. "La Fin de l'été" – 2:35
    Original title: "À la fin de l'été… (Tu sais)"
    Lyrics by: Jean-Max Rivière
    Music written by: Gérard Bourgeois
    First performed by: Brigitte Bardot, 1964
  5. "En vous aimant bien" – 2:15
    Accompanied by: John Paul Jones
  6. "Qui peut dire?" – 2:05
    Accompanied by: Jacques Dutronc
  7. "Des ronds dans l'eau" – 2:25
    Lyrics by: Pierre Barouh
    Music written by: Raymond Le Sénéchal
    First performed by: Nicole Croisille and Annie Girardot, 1967[6]
  8. "Il n'y a pas d'amour heureux" – 2:20
    Lyrics: poem by Louis Aragon
    Music written by: Georges Brassens
    First performed by: Georges Brassens, 1953
  9. "Il est trop loin" – 3:40
    Original title: "Sorrow"
    Lyrics and music written by: Peter Yarrow and Noel "Paul" Stookey
    First performed by: Peter, Paul and Mary, 1962
    French adaptation by: Daniel Hortis and Danyel Gérard[7]
  10. "Mais il y a des soirs" – 2:10
    Accompanied by: John Paul Jones
  11. "Voilà" – 3:20
    Accompanied by: Jacques Denjean
  12. "C'était charmant" – 1:55

Editions

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LP records: first editions in the English-speaking world

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Reissue on CD

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ Allmusic review
  2. ^ Ariza Lázaro, Sergio (January 17, 2017). "Las 10 mejores canciones de Françoise Hardy" (in Spanish). Diariocrítico.com. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  3. ^ Trodaec, Michel (April 8, 2020). "Les trésors de nos discothèques. Françoise Hardy a chanté tant de belles choses". Ouest-France (in French).
  4. ^ Ma Jeunesse Fout Le Camp, overview, Allmusic. Accessed on line May 7, 2009.
  5. ^ Instrumental entitled "Baby Goodbye".
  6. ^ Song from the film Vivre pour vivre of Claude Lelouch. Sung in French by Annie Girardot and in English by Nicole Croisille: "Now you want to be loved" (Sonny Miller), Disc' AZ (EP1144), 1967.
  7. ^ Danyel Gérard was the first performer of the French version titled "Elle est trop loin", Disc' AZ, (EP 941 Medium), 1963.
  8. ^ Les titres "Qui peut dire ?" et "Voilà" sont remplacés par "Je ne sais pas ce que je veux" et "Avec des si".