Richard Clayderman – Ballade Pour Adeline

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clayderman in 2006
By I, Marc Minier, CC BY 2.5, Link

“Ballade pour Adeline”
Single by Richard Clayderman
from the album Richard Clayderman
A-side“Ballade pour Adeline (Sonate pour Piano et Orchestre)”
B-side“Ballade pour Adeline (Piano seul)”
Released1977
StudioDelphine Studios
LabelDelphine
Composer(s)Paul de Senneville
Producer(s)Paul de Senneville
Richard Clayderman singles chronology
“n. a.””Ballade pour Adeline
(1977)”Les Fleurs Sauvages”
(1978)

Ballade pour Adeline” (French for “Ballad for Adeline”) is a 1977 instrumental by Richard Clayderman, composed by Paul de Senneville. Paul de Senneville composed the piece as a tribute to his newborn daughter, Adeline. As of 2020, worldwide sales of the recording have reached 22 million copies in 38 countries. It remains Clayderman’s signature hit.

The French trumpeter Jean-Claude Borelly recorded his version in the early 1980s, which used the same instrumental backing track as the original recording.

https://youtu.be/1QMC2n2MuPw

Richard Clayderman performed a duet of the track with guitarist Francis Goya in 1999, and it was released on their studio album, Together. This recording also used the same backing track.

Francis Goya – Ballade Pour Adeline

A new version of this piece was released on the Richard Clayderman studio album A Thousand Winds in 2007, to celebrate 30 years since the original release of “Ballade Pour Adeline.” Clayderman was accompanied by a new string arrangement by Olivier Toussaint.

Richard Clayderman – Ballade Pour Adeline (1977) | 40th Anniversary

History

In 1976, Richard Clayderman (real name Philippe Pagès) received a telephone call from Olivier Toussaint, a well-known French record producer, who, with his partner, Paul de Senneville, was looking for a pianist to record a gentle piano ballad. Paul had composed this ballad as a tribute to his new born second daughter “Adeline”. The 23-year-old Philippe Pagès was auditioned along with 20 other hopefuls and, to his amazement, he got the job. “We liked him immediately”, says Paul de Senneville, “His very special and soft touch on the keyboards combined with his reserved personality and good looks very much impressed Olivier Toussaint and I. We made our decision very quickly”.

Philippe Pagès’ name was changed to Richard Clayderman (he adopted his great-grandmother’s last name to avoid mispronunciation of his real name outside France), and the single went on to sell 22 million copies in 38 countries. It was called “Ballade pour Adeline”. “When I signed him”, says Olivier Toussaint, “I told him that if we sell 10,000 singles it will be marvellous, because it was disco at that time and we could not bet on such a ballad being a winner….. We could not imagine that it would be so big”.

Instrumentation

Originally composed for piano solo. The Clayderman recording features an accompaniment consisting of strings, keyboard, guitar, bass guitar, and drums. This tune has sometimes been attempted on the guitar too.

James Last – Ballade pour Adeline

James Last – Ballade pour adeline

André Rieu – Ballade pour Adeline

André Rieu – Ballade pour Adeline

Ballade Pour Adeline – Richard Clayderman on Yamaha Tyros 5

Ballade Pour Adeline – Richard Clayderman on Yamaha Tyros 5 (4K)

BALLADE POUR ADELINE (RICHARD CLAYDERMAN) – ROBERTO ZEOLLA ON YAMAHA GENOS

BALLADE POUR ADELINE (RICHARD CLAYDERMAN) – ROBERTO ZEOLLA ON YAMAHA GENOS

Dave MonkBallade Pour Adeline

Ballade Pour Adeline – Richard Clayderman – instrumental cover by Dave Monk

Darius Zama – Ballade pour Adeline

https://youtu.be/9bF196eRxFA

Ballade Pour Adeline – Paul de Senneville, Piano

https://youtu.be/ZYEzjtWxd44

Structure

  • 19 bars divided into three parts – A, B and A’ (akin to extended binary)
  • Part A ranges from bar 1 to 10, B from bar 11–16 and lastly A’ from bar 17–19

Phrasal structure

  • Introduction of two bars antecedent phrase (bar 3 to bar 6) consequent phrase (bar 7 to bar 10)
  • B short (first part of bar 11) short (second part of bar 11) long (bar 12) short (first part of bar 13) short (second part of bar 13) long bar (bars 14-16)
  • A’ is simply a repetition of the antecedent phrase in A. It is played an octave higher.

Findings

The introduction mainly uses arpeggios to create the water imagery. The crescendo and decrescendo contribute to the contour of the piece. Lastly, the usage of semiquavers in the introduction quickens the pace of the piece, making it smooth and flow-like. The piece starts off sweetly with (I-IV-V7-I)x2. It is a simple T-PD-D-T style. Here the composer used the change in dynamics to emphasize the difference between antecedent and consequent phrase. Again, here the composer used semiquavers to add in different styles. To a certain extent the series of eight semiquavers may sound juxtaposing to the smooth/sweet mood created in the piece. In B again, the dreamy effect is emphasized with the introduction of the semiquavers. In bar 11, it starts from F and makes it way down by step. It creates direction both in the piece as well as in the phrase. Furthermore, it seems to be anticipating a climax. In bar 12, the descending tone is “quicken” as we can see a rapid decrease E-D-C-B in the right hand. This E-D-C-B phrase seems to be a little “extra” as the melody then goes back to E and continued with its original rate of movement downwards. Finally, the direction of the piece swings upwards into a full swing. It moved 3 octaves progressively within 2 bars and moved from G to G. The melody is accompanied by alternate accent on G and D in the left hand. The difference in its dynamics from p to ff as well as bring an octave higher than in A. The range of G has also expended to include more notes and add volume to C. the E in bar 3 was omitted and in bar 17 replaced by G. this “octave in the right hand” phenomenon extends for the whole of A’ here.

Cultural references

  • Ballade pour Adeline was used as the demo song for the Casio CT-650, a keyboard manufactured by Casio in 1989.
Vintage Casio CT-650 465 ToneBank keyboard Demo "Ballade pour Adeline by Richard Clayderman
Lovingly Yours Helen Theme Song
  • Kingfisher Airlines India used Ballade pour Adeline as its signature tune for pre-departures and post arrivals.
  • The ballad is played repeatedly in the film Goodbye Berlin while the protagonists are on their road trip
  • The ballad is played during episode 21 of the German crime series The Old Fox (first broadcast November 24, 1978 on ZDF).
  • One recording of this piece served as the theme music of long-running (1979–2005) Swedish Radio gardening program Trädgårdsdags [sv].

Charts

Weekly charts
Chart (1977-1981)
Peak position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) 1
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) 13
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 32
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) 36
Norway (VG-lista) 2
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan) 6
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 1
West Germany (Official German Charts) 6
Year-end charts
Chart (1977) Position
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 10
Chart (1979) Position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) 4
West Germany (Official German Charts) 6

Goodbye Berlin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tschick poster.jpg
By https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4911940/, Fair use, Link

Tschick
Directed byFatih Akın
Written byLars Hubrich,
Hark Bohm,
Fatih Akin
Produced byMarco Mehlitz
CinematographyRainer Klausmann
Edited byAndrew Bird
Music byVince Pope
Production
company
Lago Film
Distributed byStudioCanal
Release dates12 September 2016 (World premiere)15 September 2016 (Germany)
Running time93 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

Tschick (English: Goodbye Berlin) is a 2016 German comedy-drama film directed by Fatih Akın, based on Wolfgang Herrndorf‘s bestselling 2010 novel Tschick (released as Why We Took the Car in English-speaking countries). The film depicts two teenage outsiders from Berlin who steal a car and go on an eccentric roadtrip through East Germany during the summer holidays. Tschick received mostly positive reviews in Germany.

GOODBYE BERLIN TRAILER – Teenage RoadTrip Movie – 2017 (Tschick)

Cast

  • Tristan Göbel as Maik Klingenberg
  • Anand Batbileg as Andrej “Tschick” Tschichatschow
  • Nicole Mercedes Müller as Isa Schmidt
  • Aniya Wendel as Tatjana Cosic
  • Anja Schneider as Maik’s mother
  • Uwe Bohm as Maik’s father
  • Xenia Assenza as Mona, father’s secretary
  • Udo Samel as Herr Wagenbach, teacher
  • Claudia Geisler as Mother of child-rich family
  • Marc Hosemann as village policeman
  • Alexander Scheer as the judge
  • Friederike Kempter as Maik’s lawyer

Watch the movie

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