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・ Véronique Jardin
・ Véronique Lathuraz
・ Véronique Laury
・ Véronique Le Flaguais
・ Véronique Mang
・ Véronique Marot
・ Véronique Mathieu
・ Véronique Morin
・ Véronique Müller
・ Véronique North-Minca
・ Véronique Olmi
・ Véronique Ovaldé
・ Véronique Pecqueux-Rolland
・ Véronique Pons
・ Véronique Rivière
Véronique Sanson
・ Véronique Sanson discography
・ Véronique Schurmann
・ Véronique Silver
・ Véronique Tadjo
・ Véronique Trinquet
・ Véronique Vendell
・ Véronne
・ Véronnes
・ Véronyque Tremblay
・ Vérossaz
・ Vértes Hills
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Véronique Sanson : ウィキペディア英語版
Véronique Sanson

Véronique Sanson (full name, Véronique Marie Line Sanson,〔according to the ASCAP Songwriter's Database〕 born 24 April 1949, in Boulogne-Billancourt, near Paris, France) is a three-time Victoires de la Musique Award-winning French singer-songwriter, musician, and producer with an avid following in her native country.
She brings a very personal vocal style to the singing of French pop songs: Her voice has a very strong tremolo.
Unlike most previous French artists of the Sixties and early Seventies, who mostly released EPs usually consisting of a collection of singles, B-sides and covers, Sanson was one of the first female artists to release actual albums with a full-length artistic statement and comprising songs flowing together thematically.
In 1972, her breakthrough album, ''Amoureuse'', was reviewed by many critics as groundbreaking, and ten years after Barbara, Véronique Sanson became one of the very first French female singer-songwriters to break into stardom.
One of her songs, "Amoureuse", was covered in English in 1973 by singer Kiki Dee, and became a major hit in the United Kingdom, and has been covered since by various other singers, from Polly Brown (1973) to Olivia Newton-John (1974) and a dance-music version by Illusive, featuring Amanda Abbs (1997). In 1974, Patti Dahlstrom recorded a second version with her own lyrics, entitled "Emotion", and this new version was covered by Helen Reddy (1974) and Shirley Bassey (1975). Many other covers of "Amoureuse" have been recorded in French, German, Japanese...〔"Véro en vrai" par Yann Morvan, booklet included in the Whole-collection-box "Et voilà", 2008.〕
Véronique Sanson plays piano and guitar.
== Childhood and family ==
Both her parents, René and Colette Sanson, were members of the Resistance during the German occupation of France. Before the war, was a French diplomat in The Hague. When the Germans invaded the Netherlands, he sent a coded message to warn the French government that Germany was planning to attack France from across the Belgian border. This very message was decoded by Colette, a communication worker at the French Ministry of War. It was not until a few months later that they met in person, in a resistance cell. Both became prominent within the French Resistance. In 1944, after the bombing of a German train, Colette was arrested and sentenced to death by the occupation force before she managed to escape.〔Documentary "La douceur du danger" by Didier Varrod 2005〕 After the liberation of Paris, René Sanson was appointed Minister of Labour in Charles de Gaulle's provisional government. The couple married in 1945. As a lawyer and an economist, René Sanson remained involved in politics as Member of Parliament and Mayor of the 13th district of Paris until 1967.〔
Véronique grew up in a very posh and privileged Parisian home. She attended the Cours Hattemer, a private school. Her parents considered music the finest art there was, and emphasized the musical apprenticeship of their daughters. Her mother introduced her to the guitar, while her father, who was a great fan of jazz, taught her the piano at the age of four. Early on, she displayed great ability and could play complex classical pieces by Mozart, Bach or Gershwin.
At the age of 13, she already composed her own songs, influenced by The Beatles, Ray Charles and by Dionne Warwick's peculiar vibrato. In 1965, she was struck by amnesia after a severe bout of meningitis. This experience became a leitmotiv in Sanson's work, as she often expressed a deep nostalgia towards her "forgotten childhood"〔"Ainsi s'en va la vie" recorded in 1985〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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