Inspiré par Bob Dylan et Leonard Cohen, Francis Cabrel, né à Agen en 1953, chante depuis quarante ans l'attachement à la terre des ancêtres, l'amour éternel, l'injustice sociale, l'écologie…
Among Francis Cabrel's many recordings since 1977, Hors-Saison (Out Season) remains his classic. Paced easily and intently on groove figures and melodic folk and rock songs, in 1999, Cabrel arrived at the epitome of his art. Using the same quartet that recorded Sabarcane with Manu Katchie on drums and percussion, bassist Bernard Paganotti, Gerard Bikialo on Hammond organ and Wurlitzer, with Denys Lable on acoustic guitar and the percussion stylings of Denis Benarrosh, Cabrel has created an immediate, spare, direct emotional statement of melancholy and simplicity.
Cabrel was born into a modest family, his father was employed as a blue-collar worker and his mother was a cashier. He has a sister, Martine, and a brother, Philippe.
Francis Cabrel singing in Spanish.
I heard Francis Cabrel on the radio with the song that name the title of this album "La Quiero A Morir (Je L'Aime À Mourir)".
In my humble opinion this is the last and best Cabrel's album, three important songs appear in this: "Répondez-Moi" "Carte Postale" "Chandelle"
The melancholy title track that opens Carte Postale announces that Francis Cabrel will not be content to churn out bottomless clone albums.
Featuring: Featuring: "L'Encre De Tes Yeux", "De L'Autre Côté De Toi", "Si Tu La Croises Un Jour"
On Fragile, Cabrel doesn't stray far from the approach of his preceding album, Les Chemins de Traverse, alternating uptempo blues-oriented rockers with ballads and smooth pop rock.