Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Bénabar

 
Artist: Bénabar
  • Born: June 16, 1969, Essonne, Paris, France
  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Piano
  • Representative Albums: "Les Risques du Métier", "Live au Grand Rex", "Reprise des Négociations

Biography

Singer/songwriter Bénabar emerged at the vanguard of France's "chanson réaliste" movement, crafting uncommonly literary portraits of contemporary life informed by folk, jazz, and film. Born Bruno Nicolini on June 16, 1969, in the Paris suburb of Essonne, he began studying trumpet at age eight, and after completing school spent six months in the U.S. There his longtime fascination with filmmaking grew, and upon returning home he trained as a photographer and film technician, at age 20 writing and directing his first short film, Nada Lezard. In the decade to follow Nicolini released two additional shorts, most notably the Montreal Film Festival award-winning José Jeannette. However, his ambitions to direct a feature-length project were stalled by financing troubles, and in the interim he turned to television, writing for the Canal+ production H.

At age 25 Nicolini also began writing songs, teaching himself piano and performing in nightclubs under the alias Bénabar, inspired by the famed clown Barnabé. While touring with frequent collaborator Patchol, Bénabar formed his own band in 1996, enlisting saxophonist Denis Grare, trumpeter Vincent Schaeffer, double bassist Stéphane Benveniste, and drummer Pascal Vignon. Dubbed Bénabar et Associés, they issued their debut LP, La P'tite Monnaie, in early 1998, spending much of the year to come on tour. Upon signing with major label Zomba, Bénabar issued a self-titled album in September 2001, followed by an extended tour in support of Henri Salvador. The LP went gold, and just 18 months later Bénabar issued the follow-up, Les Risques du Métier.

Another grinding tour schedule followed, yielding the concert set Live au Grand Rex. With 2005's Reprise des Négociations, Bénabar issued his most intimate collection to date, eschewing the social commentary that was the hallmark of previous records in favor of more explicitly autobiographical material, including the lead single, "Maritie and Gilbert Carpentier." On the heels of Reprise, Bénabar expanded his résumé to actor, as he appeared in several films. However, Bénabar returned to music three years later in 2008 with Infrequentable. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Bénabar
Top
Bénabar

Bénabar in concert in Paris (november 2006)
Background information
Birth name Bruno Nicolini
Born 16 June 1969 (1969-06-16) (age 40)
Origin Thiais, France
Genres Chanson
Occupations Singer, Song writer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1997–present
Website benabar.com

Bénabar (Bruno Nicolini, born June 16, 1969) is a French songwriter and singer, who could be compared to Vincent Delerm and other singers from his generation. As many of them he was influenced by Georges Brassens, Renaud Séchan, Jacques Higelin and also Tom Waits. His songs describe day-to-day life events with humour and a tender cynicism. His songs draw influence from French Chanson and a heavy influence is placed on the piano or the accordion and on typical French fanfare (brass band) for the most upbeat of them. This genre of music is very typically French and differs from most in that emphasis is placed on appreciation of the lyrics and that it is linked to a specific culture of modern "guinche" (slang for "guinguette") appreciated a lot by Bobos among others.

He began his career in the cinema, working as an assistant on Le Brasier (1991) and directed three short subjects Nada Lezard (1991), Sursum corda (1994) et José Jeannette (1992). He then turned to music, working for some time with his friend Patchol who gave him his nickname (Bénabar being the "verlan" of Barnabé, the name he was using on stage). With "Les associés" he sang for several years in small places in France, Belgium, Switzerland before becoming more and more popular after the release of Bénabar (2001) that enabled him to be the opening act for Henri Salvador. He was nominated as a Revelation for the "Victoires de la musique 2003" but did not win it. In 2004, after the successful release of Les risques du métier, he won the award for "album "chanson/variété" of the year". His next album Reprise des négociations sold better than the previous ones: according to Le Figaro, Bénabar reached number 4 for CD sales in France, with 2.18 million euros sales in 2006. In 2007 he won the awards for "Male group or artist of the year" and "original song of the year" (for Le dîner).

He has two brothers named Patrick and Sébastien. He has a son born in 2004 and named Manolo and a daughter born in 2009.

Contents

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album FR
[1]
BE
[2]
SZ
[3]
Sales
[4]
1997 La p'tite monnaie
  • Bénabar et associés
194 - -
2001 Bénabar 20 - - France: Platinum (510,100)
2003 Les risques du métier 6 31 40 France: Platinum (569,300)
2005 Reprise des négociations 1 5 25 France: Diamond (1.045.400)
2008 Infréquentable 1 1 6 France: Platinum (200,000)

Live albums

Year Album FR
BE
SZ
Sales
2004 Live au Grand Rex 10 28 41 France: Gold (173.100)

Compilations

Year Album FR
BE
SZ
Sales
2004 Couche-tard et lève-tôt
  • Québécois release
- - -
2007 Best of - 5 53 France: Gold (75,000)

Singles

Year Single FR BE SZ
2003 "L'itineraire" - - -
2005 "Le diner" - - -
2005 "Maritie & Gilbert Carpentier" - - -
2005 "Quatre murs et un toit" - - -
2008 "L'effet papillion" - 4 65
Preceded by
Raphaël
Victoires de la Musique
Male group or artist of the year

2007
Succeeded by
Abd Al Malik

References

See also



 
 
Learn More
Bénabar (Rock Artist, '90s, 2000s)
Renan Luce (Rock Artist, 2000s)
Cali (Rock Artist, '90s, 2000s)

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bénabar" Read more