After yesterday's rant about the decline of good, honest music in favour of prepackaged boy bands, I felt today's post should relate in some way. So, my dears, I've chosen for today's post, the sirens of French Bubblegum Pop...Yé-yé girls.
In the very early 1960s, a new music scene was slowly emerging. Born in France and reinvented all over Europe, yé-yé would have just as much of an impact on fashion as it would the world of music.
Coming out of the restrained 1950s, music with a little sex appeal was welcomed. Yé-yé delivered. Most of the songs flirted with the subject of sex, but not in an overtly sexual way.
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Yé-yé music and fashion quickly spread throughout Europe and Canada leaving it's mark on another emerging fashion subculture, Mod. There were many yé-yé girls, and boys, from all over the world. I've chosen to focus on the ones who have a look and a sound that I personally find the most inspiring.
France Gall--Arguably the most famous of the yé-yé girls, she began her career at sixteen when her first single, "Ne sois pas si bête", was released in 1963. it quickly became a hit.
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This led to collaborations with many influential composers, namely Serge Gainsborough. In 1965, she sang the winning tune, Gainsborough's "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" for the Eurovision Song Contest. It's lyrics have, as do most of Gainsborough's, a double meaning. France later took offense to "Wax Doll, Singing Doll" as well as to the sexual connotations in another Gainsborough penned song, "Sucettes" when she became old enough to understand the allusions of the songs...later she would even refuse to perform her award winning "Poupée de cire". It seemed Hummy had lost his little Lo.
Françoise Hardy--Her first hit, in 1962 was actually a B side, "Tous les garçons et les filles".
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Here are some of my favourite yé-yé girls...and boys...doing what they do best! I've tried to find original scopitones for as many as I could!:
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