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Ca Plane Pour Moi English Translation

1977 single by Plastic Bertrand

"Ça aeroplane pour moi"
Plastic Bertrand - Ça plane pour moi.jpg
Single past Plastic Bertrand
from the album An i
B-side "Pogo Pogo"
Released 1977
Genre Punk rock[1]
Length 2:57
Label
  • AMC
  • Sire
Songwriter(s)
  • Lou Deprijck
  • Yvan Lacomblez
Producer(southward) Lou Deprijck
Plastic Bertrand singles chronology
"New Promotion"
(1975)
"Ça aeroplane pour moi"
(1977)
"Bambino"
(1978)
Music video
"Ça plane pour moi" (TopPop, 1977) on YouTube

"Ça aeroplane pour moi" (French pronunciation: ​ [sa plan puʁ mwa]) is a 1977 vocal by Plastic Bertrand,[2] though its vocals were really performed by Lou Deprijck, the tape's producer and composer.[3] "Jet Boy, Jet Daughter", a song by Elton Motello, has the aforementioned backing track that was later used in "Ça airplane cascade moi".[four] The song has been covered by many artists, though Plastic Bertrand's original recording was the most successful, reaching No. 8 on the Uk charts in the summer of 1978.[five] [vi] While mainly regarded equally a punk song,[i] "Ça plane pour moi" has also been described as parody punk[7] and equally new wave.[2] The song's name is a French idiomatic expression that is best translated as "everything's going well for me" (literally: "it is gliding for me").[8]

Background [edit]

"Ça plane pour moi" was conceived as a pastiche, a extravaganza of the punk movement.[ix] [10] Lou Deprijck explained:[9]

Everything started from the text of Pipou [nickname of Yvan Lacomblez], which required a very staccato singing, as did, in the United Kingdom, the then stylish punk singers. I only brought to the text the title, by reference to a song by Michel Delpech, Tu me fais planer. What we wanted to practise was pogo-pogoing, the punk trip the light fantastic. A kind of pastiche. I had three elementary chords, A E and D, and musicians that I had chosen to fit the bill. I did not want virtuosos but guys a little bit wild. Once in the studio, with this text and my three chords, I told them "Get by yourselves" and we did it.

The music was recorded past Mike Butcher (guitar), John Valcke (bass) and Bob Dartsch (drums), and the song was released every bit a B-side to "Pogo-Pogo",[x] which was called to launch the solo career of Plastic Bertrand. However, post-obit the success of the B-side, the sides were switched when the unmarried was repressed.[xi] It took two hours to record "Ça aeroplane cascade moi" and "Pogo-Pogo".[ix] [10]

Composition [edit]

"Ça aeroplane pour moi" is a three-chord stone song[nine] [12] that features nonsensical French lyrics with occasional lines in English.[12] Lou Deprijck claims that "The lyrics are a sequence of unconnected things, that a guy, who is stoned, thinks he sees".[13] Steve Huey from AllMusic describes the vocal melody as a "... four-notation hook which sounds like something direct out of an early Beach Boys or 4 Seasons song" that Roger Jouret (Plastic Bertrand) sings in a "dead-on falsetto."[12] This melody is created by "... mildly distorted guitars, plus a steadily pumping rhythm section and an one-time-time rock & whorl-style saxophone ... inappreciably used for anything other than rhythmic accompaniment."[12] Huey besides qualifies Jouret's phonation equally "cartoonish" and that it "... stays in a monotone as he recites all the lyrics."[12]

Reputation [edit]

The song was praised past Joe Strummer: "Plastic Bertrand compressed into that three minutes a encarmine skilful tape that will get whatever comatose person toe-borer, you know what I mean? By purist rules, information technology's not allowed to even mention Plastic Bertrand. Nonetheless, this record was probably a lot better than a lot of so-called punk records."[14]

Nautical chart functioning [edit]

"Ça aeroplane pour moi" became a hit in several European countries, peaking at No. xix in Austria, No. 12 in Sweden, No. 11 in Bertrand's native Kingdom of belgium, No. 8 in the U.1000., No. 6 in West Frg, No. iv in Ireland, No. two in holland, No. 7 in New Zealand and No. two in Commonwealth of australia.[15] [16] [17] Information technology also topped the Swiss charts for 1 week[18] and the French charts for two consecutive weeks.[19]

In the U.S., the single peaked at No. 47 on the Billboard Hot 100, a feat for a French-language song because but "Dominique" by The Singing Nun[ citation needed ] and "Je t'aime... moi non plus" by Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin[x] had previously achieved such chart performance.[x] [20] [21] It likewise peaked at No. 58 in Canada.[22]

The single has sold over 900,000 copies effectually the globe[23] and is regarded equally a "punk-new wave-popular classic."[x] [24]

Charts [edit]

Certifications and sales [edit]

Leila K version [edit]

"Ça airplane pour moi"
Leila K-Ça plane pour moi.jpg
Unmarried by Leila K
from the album Carousel
B-side "Cheque The Dan"
Released 1993
Genre Electropop[39]
Length 3:23
Label
  • Mega Records
  • Urban
  • Polydor
Songwriter(s)
  • Lou Deprijck
  • Yvan Lacomblez
Producer(s)
  • Denniz Popular
  • Douglas Carr
Leila K singles chronology
"Open up Sesame"
(1992)
"Ça plane pour moi"
(1993)
"Ho-hum Motion"
(1993)
Music video
"Ça plane pour moi" on YouTube

Swedish vocaliser and old rapper Leila Grand covered "Ça plane cascade moi" in 1993. Information technology was released as the second unmarried from her first solo album, Carousel. The song was produced past Denniz Pop and Douglas Carr, and achieved moderate success on the charts in many European countries. It peaked at No. 6 in Finland, No. 8 in Austria, No. xiii in Federal republic of germany, No. fourteen in Denmark, No. 16 in Belgium and No. 17 in Switzerland. On the Eurochart Hot 100, "Ça plane pour moi" reached No. 21 in May 1993.

Critical reception [edit]

Pan-European magazine Music & Media wrote, "The Plastic Bertrand French-language punk classic is re-styled in an electronic trip the light fantastic toe fashion à la Billy Idol. Très bien! Bonton Radio/Prague head of music Peter Kricek says that the original out of 1978 was known in his country in the communist days, simply information technology was more of an surreptitious thing. 'The people hither are absolutely mad about Leila'southward cover, which is a powerplay at our station. Every iv hours we play it.'"[xl] Alan Jones from Music Calendar week gave it three out of five, stating that it "is transformed into technopunk past the self-proclaimed "queen of the divan" who, although better known as a rapper is in singing mode here." He added, "The Felix mixes on the CD and 12-inch accept it into trance territory. An odd combination, only likely to practise well."[41]

Track listing [edit]

Maxi single (Urban 861 597-2)[42]
  1. "Ça airplane cascade moi" (Short) – three:23
  2. "Bank check the Dan" (Brusque) – three:55
  3. "Ça plane pour moi" (Long) – 5:48
  4. "Check the Dan" (Long) – half-dozen:35

Charts [edit]

Other cover versions [edit]

  • In 1978, by Benny Schnier under the title "Bin wieder frei".
  • In 1979, past Telex on the album Looking for Saint Tropez.[58]
  • In 1984, by Hermann Gunnarsson under the title "Einn dans við mig" on the album Frískur og Fjörugur.[59]
  • In 1992, by Sonic Youth for a compilation album.[60]
  • In 1997, past Thee Headcoatees on the anthology Punk Girls.[61]
  • In 1998, by the Presidents of the Usa on the album Rarities. [62]
  • In 2006, by Richard Thompson on the album RT- The Life and Music of Richard Thompson.[63]
  • In 2006, by Pigloo under the championship "Ça plane pour moi (le twist)", every bit the third single from the album La Banquise. Information technology reached number xviii on the French SNEP Singles Nautical chart and remained in the top 100 for 24 weeks.[64]
  • In 2009, by Nouvelle Vague on the album three.[65]
  • In 2019, past Metallica at a concert in King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels.[66]

Run across also [edit]

  • Listing of number-1 singles of 1978 (France)
  • List of number-one singles from 1968 to 1979 (Switzerland)

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b
    • "Celine Dion Enters War Of Words". Billboard. Vol. 107, no. 30. 29 July 1995. p. 38. ISSN 0006-2510.
    • Ferrere, Vanessa (27 July 2010). "Plastic Bertrand: le indicate sur la polémique". Fifty'Express (in French). Retrieved 2 February 2014.
    • Fricke, David. "Plastic Bertrand". Trouser Press. Archived from the original on 11 May 2012. Retrieved 2 Feb 2014.
    • Jones, Sam (29 July 2010). "Plastic Bertrand admits: Ça north'était pas moi". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 9 November 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
    • "Plastic Bertrand, de retour sur Terre". Paris Match (in French). 27 July 2010. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved two February 2014.
  2. ^ a b Huey, Steve. "Plastic Bertrand – Artist Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved nine June 2013.
  3. ^ "Plastic Bertrand admits non singing pop archetype". Expatica. 28 July 2010. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved fifteen July 2013.
  4. ^ Reid, Graham (iii November 2010). "Elton Motello: Jet Boy Jet Daughter (1978)". Elsewhere . Retrieved 30 Apr 2022.
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  7. ^ "The Other Brussels". LTM Recordings. Archived from the original on 18 February 2014. Retrieved xi June 2013.
  8. ^ "Plastic Bertrand: lyrics". David.gibbs.co.uk. August 2007. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d Przybylski, Eddy (8 October 2006). "Les vrais musiciens de Ça plane pour moi". La Dernière Heure (in French). Retrieved 11 June 2013.
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  13. ^ "Plastic Bertrand - Ca Plane Cascade Moi Het verhaal achter het nummer". Height 2000 a gogo. 13 June 2018. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2021 – via YouTube.
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Ca Plane Pour Moi English Translation,

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%87a_plane_pour_moi

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