Jacques Vaillant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jacques Vaillant is a French singer born on 8 June 1952 in Strasbourg (Alsace, France).

Biography[edit]

Portrait of Jacques Vaillant

Jacques Vaillant is an interpreter of French-language pop songs.

When he was six years old, he overcame the ordeal of an accident that left him almost completely blind. As he became a soprano in his school's choir, in Still, France, he felt a revelation: he already dreamt about singing on-stage.

In 1968, he was a contestant in the French radio Europe 1's show, "Les numéro 1 de demain", ("Numbers 1 of tomorrow"), which was touring via Strasbourg. In 1970, aged 18, Jacques Vaillant travelled throughout France, hitch-hiking and living from salesman opportunities. He stopped a while in Montpellier, and then in Marseille. In this town, he met Charles Humel, a French blind pianist and composer. Now deceased, the latter had composed the famous song Les plaines du far-west for Yves Montand. Next year, Jacques Vaillant arrived in the City of Lights, Paris.

In 1975, a guitar in his hands, he sang in the Paris métro. Trocadéro, République, Montparnasse stations: he gathered bigger audiences as days went by. The year 1980 marked the release of Jacques Vaillant's second 45 rpm record Pourquoi piétiner les fleurs, the starting point of his career: ten thousand copies sold within a few months only. During the 1980s, the title Slow pour Alvina was distributed in disc shops, with Carrère publishing. Broadcast on major French radios (such as Europe 1, NRJ, Radio Monte Carlo, Radio 7, Sud Radio), this title was a first-place hit for days in Belgium, Switzerland, Benelux and in French DOM-TOM territories.

Finally, on account of lack of commercial success, he went back to the Métro. In these underground corridors, he would sell 40,000 copies of his first vinyl album Correspondances, produced in 1983. Henceforth, he wrote poems and song texts, finding his inspiration in everyday life. After more ten years of silence, Jacques Vaillant produced his latest CD, Paris Nostalgie.

Discography[edit]

External links[edit]