Francoise Hardy - Discography - [UPD]
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In the second half of the decade, Hardy became a pop icon and was consequently made a muse by numerous creative people.[127][179] She was the subject of portraits by artists Michel Bourdais,[199] Bernard Buffet,[200] Gabriel Pasqualini[201] and Jean-Paul Goude.[202] In 1965, Jacques Prvt wrote a poem dedicated to the singer titled Une Plante Verte, which was read as part of Hardy's performance at the Olympia.[203] She was also the subject of a poem by Manuel Vzquez Montalbán[204] and an open letter by Paul Guth.[205] Belgian illustrator Guy Peellas used Hardy as a model for the title character of his 1968 pop art and letamicinfluenced comic Pravda la Survireuse, made in collaboration with French screenwriter Pascall Thomas.[179][206] The singer was admired by Spanish artist Salvador Dal,[127] who invited her to spend a whole week with him in Cadaqs in 1968.[207] Outside of France, Hardy was also regarded as an icon in the Swinging London scene.[208][19] She acknowledges to have been a "source of fascination for the English pop musicians" during that time.[7] Malcolm McLaren described her as the "utmost of the pinup girl, pinned to the walls of every trendy pop apprentice's bedroom down in Chelsea. Many bands in their prime, like the Beatles or the Stones, dreamt of dating her."[39] Her image fascinated the young David Bowie,[110] Mick Jagger (who described her as his "ideal woman"),[7] Brian Jones[30] Morrissey,[191] and Richard Thompson.[128] Bob Dylan was notably infatuated by the singer and included a beat poem dedicated to her on the back cover of his 1964 album Another Side of Bob Dylan.[128][7] It begins: "for franoise hardy/at the seine's edge/a giant shadow/of notre dame/seeks t' grab my foot/sorbonne students/whirl by on thin bicycles/swirling lifelike colors of leather spin..."[137][209] In 2018, Hardy told Uncut that two Americans had sent her several drafts of the poem that Dylan had left in a caf, stating: "...
On 15 December 2006, Johan Ral interviewed the legendary Sixties icon and 'grande dame' of French pop music, Franoise Hardy in Paris. Hardy talked very freely about her latest album of duets (Parenthses...), her relationship with husband Jacques Dutronc, stardom, her early musical influences (The Everly Brothers, Marty Wilde, Cliff Richard!) and her encounters with Mick Jagger and Bob Dylan, who had written for franoise hardy - at the seine's edge on the cover of Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964). She also discusses The Beatles and... McCartney. Listen to some Sixties and Beatles related highlights of this conversation, in French. d2c66b5586