Le bruit et l'odeur (album)
Le bruit et l'odeur | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Zebda | ||||
Released | 1993 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 49:22 | |||
Zebda chronology | ||||
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Le bruit et l'odeur (French pronunciation: [lə.bʁɥi.e.lɔ.dœʁ]) is the second studio album by the French rock group Zebda, released in 1995.
With this album, the group confirmed its social focus by adding engaging samples to its guitar-driven music. The album title is a reference to a politically incorrect statement made during a speech given in 1991 by the mayor of Paris and later French president Jacques Chirac (known as Le bruit et l'odeur) which was not easily forgotten by many. This album explores how far life in France at the end of the 20th century has come, especially in the south.[1][2]
Track listing
- Toulouse - 3'48"
- Taslima - 3'07"
- La Faucille et le Marteau - 2'53"
- Le Bruit et l'Odeur - 4'57"
- La Bête (J-M-L-P) - 3'30"
- France 2 - 4'31"
- Maanouche - 0'20"
- Le Bilan - 3'06"
- Chomage - 2'31"
- Mon père m'a dit - 3'56"
- Matabiau - 2'52"
- Dub du village - 0'40"
- Ma rue - 3'33"
- Basket Bolk - 0'18"
- Cameroun - 2'16"
- Héréditaire - 4'23"
- France dub - 2'41"
References
- ↑ Dayna OscherwitzPast Forward: French Cinema and the Post-Colonial Heritage 0809385880 - 2010 "Danielle Marx-Scouras has said of Zebda that their trajectory “mirrored that of France in the 1980s and 1990s, a period ... In “Le Bruit et l'odeur,” Zebda took Chirac's words, which referred to cultural difference (the “noise and smell” of African ..."
- ↑ When Music Migrates: Crossing British and European Racial ... Professor Jon Stratton - 2014 "On their 1996 album, Le Bruit et L'odeur, the title track includes a sample of the notorious speech made by Jacques Chirac"
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