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Émilie Simon

 
Artist: Emilie Simon
See Emilie Simon Lyrics
  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Piano, Guitar, Arranger
  • Representative Albums: "The Flower Book," "March of the Empress," "Vegetal"

Biography

Although Emilie Simon is a conservatory-trained experimental musician with a strong theoretical grounding, she has also made a name for herself both as a mainstream soundtrack composer and as an electronic pop musician not far removed from Björk or the Knife, with a distinctively soft, almost babyish voice that at times recalls both early Kate Bush and Claudine Longet. Born in the small coastal city of Montpellier, France, in 1978 into a musical family (her mother is a pianist, her father a sound engineer), Simon began studying music at a young age, and followed her conservatory training in voice with advanced studies in early music at the Sorbonne and electronic composition at the Institute de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique Musique (IRCAM) at the Centre Pompidou in Paris. The combination of cutting-edge electronic theory and a strong grounding in ancient vocal traditions gives Simon's work its unique tension. Simon's attractive mixture of art rock and catchy electronic pop was first unveiled on 2003's Emilie Simon, released to positive reviews and eventually winning a Victoire de la Musique (the French equivalent to the Grammy) for best electronica album of the year. Documentary director Luc Jacquet then contacted Simon to score his immersive 2005 nature documentary March of the Penquins; Simon's expressive soundtrack won the composer her second Victoire de la Musique and was nominated for a Cesar (the French equivalent to the Oscar) but lost to Bruno Coulais' score for Les Choristes. Inspired by the musique concrète elements of the soundtrack, which featured sounds of cracking ice floes and other elemental source recordings, Simon's third album, 2006's Vegetal, outdoes Stevie Wonder's Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants by not only including lyrics about vegetation but also sampled sounds taken from actual plants. In late 2006, Emilie Simon was finally properly introduced to American audiences through the release of The Flower Book, a compilation of tracks from her first three European albums. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
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Émilie Simon

Émilie Simon, Octogone, 2004
Background information
Born 17 July 1978 (1978-07-17) (age 31)
Origin Montpellier, France
Genres Electronic, pop, experimental
Occupations Singer, songwriter, composer
Years active 2003–present
Labels Universal(2003–present)
Milan (US only)
Website http://www.emiliesimon.com

Émilie Simon (born 1978 in Montpellier, France) is a singer and composer of electronic music.

Contents

Music

Émilie Simon

Live at the Paleo Festival, 23 July 2004

In May 2003, she released her debut album Émilie Simon. The electronic album was critically acclaimed and went on to become a commercial success. To promote her album, she did numerous live performances and TV appearances all over France. In 2004, she was rewarded with a Victoire de la musique in the 'Electronic Album category for the album.

Two music videos were made to promote Émilie Simon for the songs "Désert" and "Flowers". The English version of "Désert" had an identical music video to the French version. Émilie Simon was also re-released in certain parts of the world with additional tracks. Despite having been released for over three years, the album was still charting in the French mid-price album charts in late January 2007.

More recently, Émilie Simon has begun performing and releasing CDs in the United States. Her first U.S. release, The Flower Book, came out November 2006. The release was followed by a brief tour to New York and Los Angeles. In April 2007 Émilie released her second recording in the United States, The March of the Empress.

La Marche de l'empereur

Wishing to orient her second album towards a more wintry or polar setting, she proceeded to record sounds which relate to coldness such as the sounds of smashing ice and footsteps in the snow. Coincidentally, in the midst of her search for sounds for the album, she was contacted by producer Luc Jacquet to compose the original soundtrack for his documentary film La Marche de l'empereur (March of the Penguins in English), concerning the migration of emperor penguins during their annual migration.

The film came out in France at the beginning of 2005, featuring a soundtrack by Emilie Simon that was also released by Universal Music as her second album. In 2006 she won the Victoire de la musique in the “Film Soundtrack” category and was nominated for a César Award for the best film music composition. It should be noted however that the version of March of the Penguins that was released in the United States and in English Canada used a more traditional documentary soundtrack scored by Alex Wurman, the local producers fearing that the Émilie Simon soundtrack would be too challenging for North American viewers (the only cinemas in North America to screen the film with the Émilie Simon soundtrack were those of the French circuit in the province of Quebec). The Canadian DVD version of the film offers both the French version with Émilie Simons soundtrack and the American version with that of Alex Wurman.

Végétal and international success

In 2006, Émilie Simon released her third album, Végétal, in which she uses the sounds of plants; as hinted by the name. The lyrics play with words, always relating to flora. The album also contains more elements of rock music. This comes forward in some of the more lively tracks, such as "Fleur De Saison", where she plays an electric guitar. The sound remains nonetheless that of electronic music while her voice maintains its candor, softness, and beauty.

A music video has been aired for the first single "Fleur de saison", the second one called "Dame de Lotus" has also been already aired. The album utilizes OpenDisc technology which enables access to special content such as songs and music videos on her official website. Végétal is her only album to have more than one cover image. Currently, three separate covers exist for the album.

In late 2006, she released The Flower Book in the USA (April 2007 in Canada), a compilation album of her first three records, with some added material from her short international tour which included stops in New York and Los Angeles. She also used MySpace to convey messages to fans. Furthermore, "Désert" was released in vinyl in the US. The track "Rose hybride de thé", originally from Végétal, will officially be the first single release intended for US audiences.

On 5 March 2007, Émilie Simon released her first live album, titled À l'Olympia. The set exists as a sole CD or DVD, and contains live footage from a concert recorded on 19 September 2006. Songs from all of three of her albums are present in the recording.

As a follow-up to Simon’s debut U.S. release, The Flower Book, The March of the Empress (La Marche de l'empereur) was released 3 April 2007. Written as the original score to the European version of March of the Penguins, Émilie's full recordings were never released in the United States.

Concerts

During her stage performances, she performs alongside IRCAM's Cyrille Brissot who directs the program and Medhi Parisot on the guitar.

On 1 July 2005, at the Eurockéennes of Belfort, she gave a live concert with the participation of Synfonietta de Belfort and the Lyon percussion group. She worked with both of these ensembles again in a second concert, 19 January 2006 at Le Grand Rex in Paris. She then toured with Placebo, doing the first part of their tour from 29 September 2006 until the 4 December 2006. She has also done numerous concerts abroad, in Germany, Australia and the U.S..

Discography

Albums

Studio
Soundtrack
Live & Compilation

Singles

  • "Désert" (2002)
  • "Flowers" (2003)
  • "Song of the Storm" (2005)
  • "Fleur de Saison" (2006)
  • "Rose hybride de thé" (2006)
  • "Dame de lotus" (2007)
  • "Dreamland" (2009)
  • "Rainbow" (2009)

EP

  • Live Session EP (2007) released exclusively on iTunes

Prizes and nominations

Victoires de la musique

  • 2004: Electronic Music/Groove/Dance album of the year for Émilie Simon.
  • 2006: Original Film or Television soundtrack of the year for La Marche de l'empereur.
  • 2007: Electronic/groove/dance album of the year for Végétal

Nominations

  • At the Prix Constantin in 2003 for the album Émilie Simon.
  • At the Césars in 2006 for Best Original Soundtrack with La Marche de l'empereur.

References


External links


 
 

 

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
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