L'amour est bleu


"L'amour est bleu" is a song recorded by Greek singer Vicky Leandros with music composed by André Popp and French lyrics written by Pierre Cour. It in the Eurovision Song Contest 1967 held in Vienna, placing fourth.
It has since been recorded by many other musicians, most notably French orchestra leader Paul Mauriat, whose familiar instrumental version – recorded in late 1967 – became the first number-one by a French lead artist to top the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States.

Background

Conception

"L'amour est bleu" was composed by André Popp with French lyrics by Pierre Cour. It describes the pleasure and pain of love in terms of colours and elements. The lyrics of the English version focus on colours only, using them to describe components of lost love.

Eurovision

The Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Télédiffusion internally selected "L'amour est bleu" as for the of the Eurovision Song Contest, and a Greek-born 17-year-old Vicky Leandros as its performer as Vicky.
In addition to the French-language original version, she recorded the song in English –as "Colours of Love" with lyrics by Bryan Blackburn–, German –as "Blau wie das Meer" with lyrics by Klaus Munro–, Italian –as "L'amore è blu"–, and Dutch –as "Liefde is zacht"–, that were released in nineteen countries.
On 8 April 1967, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the Hofburg#Festival Hall Wing in Vienna hosted by ORF, and broadcast live throughout the continent. Vicky performed "L'amour est bleu" as the second song of the evening. Claude Denjean conducted the event's live orchestra in the performance of the entry.
At the close of voting, It had received 17 points, placing it fourth in a field of seventeen, behind "Il doit faire beau là-bas", "If I Could Choose" and the winning song, "Puppet on a String". It was succeeded as Luxembourgian representative at the by "Nous vivrons d'amour" by Chris Baldo & Sophie Garel.

Aftermath

Vicky Leandros went on to win Eurovision five years later with the song "Après toi", again representing Luxembourg.
"L'amour est bleu" achieved greater success through cover versions of the song by other artists. Some forty years after its original release, "L'amour est bleu", along with Domenico Modugno's "Nel blu dipinto di blu" and Mocedades' "Eres tú", still counts as one of very few non-winning Eurovision entries ever to become a worldwide hit. The song has since become a favourite of Contest fans, most notably appearing as part of a medley introducing the semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 in Athens, one of only three non-winning songs to be involved.

Chart history

The song was a modest hit in Europe, and had some success in Japan and Canada.

Legacy

Paul Mauriat version

According to Paul Mauriat, who conducted/recorded an orchestral "easy listening" version of "Love Is Blue", he chose the song because it was published by his label, Philips Records, even though he was not fond of the song. A DJ in Minneapolis played the recording and asked the audience to respond, and was inundated with phone calls about the song, and interest in the song then quickly spread around the country.
The song became a 1968 (USA)|number-one hit in the USA] for five weeks in February and March 1968, the first recording by a French artist to top the Billboard Hot 100. Mauriat's version became a gold record, and its five-week run at the top is the second longest of any instrumental of the Hot 100 era, after "Theme from A Summer Place". The song also spent 11 weeks atop Billboard's Easy Listening survey, and held the longest-lasting title honours on this chart for 25 years. Billboard ranked the record as the No. 2 song for 1968. It is the best-known version of the song in the United States. The Mauriat recording also reached No. 2 in Canada, and No. 12 on the UK Singles Chart. The Mauriat album containing "Love Is Blue", Blooming Hits, also reached No. 1 on the Billboard Top LP's and Tapes chart for five weeks. The song sold fewer than 30,000 units in France, but 2 million singles and 800,000 LPs were sold in the US.

In popular culture

Chart history

Weekly charts
All-time charts

Other covers