Wow merci, pensais pas la retrouver sur le net celle là ! Je l'ai enregistrée sur cassette à partir d'une émission de radio il y a quelques décennies... encore audible avec un son assourdi assez raccord avec le bandonéon mais qui ne facilite pas la compréhension.lol. Rien trouvé sur l'interprète et pas trace des paroles/lyrics, dommage mais sait-on jamais..
Lovely hearing this again. I went out and bought the record in 1976 or 77 after hearing it being raved about by John Peel on his radio show....:-) (still play the record by the way)
Maybe this version is from 1976, but I've been listening to it since 1972. The original sounds much more folk : ua-cam.com/video/PA3_VMuq4G0/v-deo.html
@@christophemounier3832 That version was four years earlier one that Lea did with Stan at Livingston studios. I remember Lea and Nick Kinsey talking about Stan when they where making the single, but i had never heard it until I followed your link. Thank you for guiding me to it.
You're welcome,@@tomleader7054! This image is that of the cover of the 45 rpm released in France in 1976, with at least 2 mistakes: on the one hand, the accent on the e, corresponding to the female first name Léa (therefore nothing to see here!) and on the other hand the mention "original version", when actually the latter dates from 1972... In fact, the record companies had this written in case the song was successful enough to have covers. But to my knowledge, this was not the case for this one.
L'époque où Richard Bronson construisait petit à petit sa carrière en tant qu'éditeur-producteur musical (Disques Virgin Music) dans les années 70, avant de devenir le multi-entrepreneur milliardaire que nous connaissons...
Absolument génial. retrouver cette chanson après presque cinquante ans, ça fait quelque chose.
Wow merci, pensais pas la retrouver sur le net celle là ! Je l'ai enregistrée sur cassette à partir d'une émission de radio il y a quelques décennies... encore audible avec un son assourdi assez raccord avec le bandonéon mais qui ne facilite pas la compréhension.lol. Rien trouvé sur l'interprète et pas trace des paroles/lyrics, dommage mais sait-on jamais..
Un grand MERCI pour ce morceau !!!
Je ne pensais pas le retrouver un jour !
Thaaaaanks ! So great to hear that song after all these years :))))
Merci, merci beaucoup. Moi non plus je ne pensais plus la réentendre. Que de souvenirs en 1977.
plutôt fin 76
@@abfab849 Mon ami, je parle ici de mes souvenirs que me rappelle ce morceau, pas de la chanson. Je l'écoutais en 77 donc souvenirs de 77. CQFD.
Remember Anne Nightingale playing this. Wonderful.
hooray!! merci!
Lovely hearing this again. I went out and bought the record in 1976 or 77 after hearing it being raved about by John Peel on his radio show....:-) (still play the record by the way)
Actually, it's a song of 1972 !
@@christophemounier3832 This version was recorded and released in '76.
Maybe this version is from 1976, but I've been listening to it since 1972. The original sounds much more folk : ua-cam.com/video/PA3_VMuq4G0/v-deo.html
@@christophemounier3832 That version was four years earlier one that Lea did with Stan at Livingston studios. I remember Lea and Nick Kinsey talking about Stan when they where making the single, but i had never heard it until I followed your link. Thank you for guiding me to it.
You're welcome,@@tomleader7054!
This image is that of the cover of the 45 rpm released in France in 1976, with at least 2 mistakes: on the one hand, the accent on the e, corresponding to the female first name Léa (therefore nothing to see here!) and on the other hand the mention "original version", when actually the latter dates from 1972... In fact, the record companies had this written in case the song was successful enough to have covers. But to my knowledge, this was not the case for this one.
fin 1976 en France
L'époque où Richard Bronson construisait petit à petit sa carrière en tant qu'éditeur-producteur musical (Disques Virgin Music) dans les années 70, avant de devenir le multi-entrepreneur milliardaire que nous connaissons...
Distribué par Barclay en 76 en France
j'écoutais cela en 1977 sur Europe1 et je viens de me rappeller le titre! c'est toujours aussi bien l'instrument principal est l'épinette je crois?
Non, le concertina, qui est un petit bandonéon.
Il a bien sûr fallu que le label français ajoute un accent aigu sur le "E" de "Lea"... :-)
en pensant que c'était une chanteuse suédoise !!
It seemed the song was only a minor hit............in FRance !!! funny because in Britain Mike Oldfield had plenty of hits like this ...
very minor
well played on RTL end '76
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