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  • 'I'M Not As Secure As I Seem To Be'

    'I'M NOT AS SECURE AS I SEEM TO BE'

    Globe and Mail
    Dec 6 2008
    Canada

    Superstar French chansonnier Charles Aznavour is 84 and, no, he is
    not resting on his laurels after selling 100-million or so records
    thus far in his career. His new album lands this week, Robert
    Everett-Green writes

    His latest concerts are billed as farewell shows, but don't say
    the word "retirement" to Charles Aznavour. "Slow down" and "stop"
    are probably also best avoided in the company of the energetic,
    natty performer I met in Toronto recently, six months after his
    84th birthday.

    "I always say that retirement is the first step towards death,"
    he said. "I love to be busy. I hate to do nothing."

    It pains him to recall that a French journalist, six years ago,
    misunderstood his decision to stop touring (as opposed to doing a
    handful of concerts from time to time) as a signal that the soulful
    prince of French chanson was calling it quits. Au contraire, mon
    vieux. At the moment, Aznavour is preparing to launch a double-disc,
    two-language album of duets (Duos, on EMI), has just finished a series
    of concerts in Germany and has another planned for Canada in the new
    year. He's also still got the itch that has produced 800 songs over
    the past 60-odd years. "I'm writing every day," he said. "I wrote
    this morning. I woke up at 6, and I finished one song. Every day,
    I have to sit at my desk and work. It's a sickness. ...

    "When I write, it's always fantastic, the song I'm writing is
    beautiful. The day after, very often I I think: Something is
    missing. And suddenly everything is missing, and I throw the song
    away. I tear up more songs than I keep."

    Print Edition - Section Front Enlarge Image

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    songs he has kept, and those he has performed by others, have shown
    up on recordings that have sold more than 100 million copies around
    the world, including one million in Canada. He has also appeared in
    more than 60 films, from Francois Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player
    to Atom Egoyan's Ararat. He's sometimes called the French Sinatra,
    which is okay as far as it goes, but Sinatra was not a songwriter.

    Or a playwright: Another of Aznavour's current projects is a one-woman
    show, for which he has written a script and 14 new songs. It will be
    like an off-Broadway show, he said. His daughter Katia is producing,
    and the star will be Clementine Celarie, an actress he did a film
    with once (Les Annees campagne, a 1992 coming-of-age movie), though he
    still hasn't heard her sing. He doesn't need to, he said. He has faith.

    At the beginning of his career, faith was practically all he had,
    along with a large helping of self-doubt. He famously summed up his
    shortcomings in 1950: "my voice, my height, my gestures, my lack of
    culture and education, my frankness and my lack of personality."

    It's hard to imagine, now, how his voice could have been a problem, so
    central is that smooth yet husky timbre to the sound of chanson over
    the past half-century. Aznavour succeeded by learning how to embody
    the sharply drawn characters and often nostalgic moods he created in
    his songs. He revived the personable, music-hall style of traditional
    chanson, sometimes bringing it into contact with such non-traditional
    subjects as homosexuality (in Comme ils disent) and street violence
    (in Le temps des loups). French popular music has gone through drastic
    changes since his first songwriting success 64 years ago (with a hit
    called J'ai bu), but Aznavour's kind of music has survived, and has
    benefited from the same revivalist trend that has boosted old-style
    crooners such as Tony Bennett and new-style chansonniers.

    "I'm not as secure as I seem to be," Aznavour said. "After so many
    years in this business, I became secure in what I'm doing. Before that,
    I was very timid, and sometimes I still am. I sometimes need people to
    explain to me whether it's good or not good ... In any kind of art,
    if you're totally secure, something is missing. We can't be really
    secure, we need the response of the public. Security is not good for
    talent. The doubt is very important."

    His songs have been covered by everyone from Maurice Chevalier to
    Elvis Costello. His Duos album features duets with Placido Domingo,
    Elton John, Celine Dion, Bryan Ferry, Sting, Paul Anka, Liza Minnelli
    and several others, in some cases revisiting on the English-language
    disc the same song performed on the French disc.

    "Elton wanted only to sing in French, but we convinced him that English
    is a good language too," Aznavour said. He has recorded and performed
    in several languages (though never in Armenian, the language of his
    parents), but recently decided that, "I don't want to sing much in
    foreign languages any more. I want to sing in French. It's because
    even in London, there are all these people who say, 'Why don't you
    sing in French?' "

    The French half of Duos includes one duet with Edith Piaf, who gave
    him a major career boost in the early forties, and with whom he worked
    and travelled and made his first tour to Canada. But he's in no rush
    to see La Vie en Rose, the acclaimed film biography that won Marion
    Cotillard an Oscar.

    "All my family saw it and loved it, but I didn't want to see it,
    because they left out something very important, which is that Edith
    Piaf had an enormous sense of humour. I don't say that it's not
    good. But they went the easy way, they showed only the sadness and
    the drama. In the preview, you see a big syringe," he said, miming
    the act of stabbing a needle into his arm. "In almost 20 years in
    the entourage of Piaf, I never saw that once. Not once."

    He's not keen on a lot of what's called la nouvelle chanson francaise,
    hearing too much of the old in the supposedly new. He's more interested
    in "slam" poets such as Grand Corps Malade (Fabien Marsaud, who
    declaims his verses over music that's gentler and more organic
    than most rap backing tracks) and francophone rappers such as Kery
    James. "These young people write French like I haven't heard for a long
    time." He's always drawn to good lyrics, in part because that's the
    way he thinks and writes: the lyrics first, and only then the music.

    He also likes the francophone Canadian singers Lynda Lemay ("she writes
    beautifully") and Diane Dufresne. "She has a great personality, and
    she's doing things onstage that I've never seen from anyone else,"
    he said of Dufresne. "She had a few songs by Kurt Weill, in which
    she gave the maximum. I've never heard Kurt Weill sung like that,
    not even by Lotte Lenya."

    Last summer, after a performance in Quebec City, Aznavour was named
    an honorary Officer of the Order of Canada. He has a lot of fans
    in Quebec and the rest of the country, and a son in Montreal who is
    about to become a citizen. He believes we Canadians are much stronger
    for having two cultures. He even thinks that our most famous pop star
    might not have got where she is without her bicultural background.

    "Celine," he said. "How did she become the biggest francophone star
    in the world? I think it's because she has digested two cultures."

    Aznavour said he is a stubborn man, and his career is proof. For
    his next concerts, he is going to concentrate on the B-sides in his
    catalogue, which he believes hardly anyone has given their due.

    "Edith Piaf had a song she sang for 20 years, to the indifference of
    the public," he said. "After 20 years, it became a success - onstage,
    not on record. You can have an enormous success with a song onstage,
    and not sell one record of that song. I have many like that, and I'm
    very proud of them. The most important song in my show now is a song
    I wrote 40 years ago. I sang it for 40 years, because I'm stubborn,
    and now it's a success."

    Charles Aznavour's Duos album comes out on Tuesday. He sings at
    Ottawa's National Arts Centre on April 19, Montreal's Place des Arts
    April 21-23 and Toronto's Roy Thomson Hall on April 26.
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