Milord (song)


"Milord" or "Ombre de la Rue" is a 1959 song, famously sung by Édith Piaf.

Background

It is a chanson that recounts the feelings of a lower-class "girl of the port" who develops a crush on an elegantly attired apparent upper-class British traveller, whom she has seen walking the streets of the town several times, but who has not even noticed her. The singer feels that she is nothing more than a "shadow of the street". Nonetheless, when she talks to him of love, she breaks through his shell; he begins to cry, and she has the job of cheering him up again. She succeeds, and the song ends with her shouting "Bravo! Milord" and "Encore, Milord".
In connection with the film about Edith Piaf, La Vie en Rose, Moustaki talked in an interview with Le Nouvel Observateur about "Milord":
"It was a song I had left in draft form until one day I found the scribbled sheet next to the typewriter Piaf had given me. I resumed to work with it. When I had written the last word I found Edith sitting on a chair behind the bedroom door. She was waiting for me to finish the text. I was barely 24 years old and, for a year that I had been living with Piaf, I had the image of an upstart gigolo. Edith summoned all the press to Maxim's to introduce me as the author of "Milord". When, at the start of the film, she says: "I'm going to record the big con's song", and she sings "Milord", it's vexing but probable. After I left, she said horrible things about me. She even almost didn't want to record "Milord", even though she was aware of its importance. It is the only song in her repertoire that became an international hit. Her impresario Loulou Barrier threatened to stop working with her if she was stupid enough not to record it".
Thus she recorded "Milord" at Capitol Studios, 151W 46th Street, New York on May 8, 1959.

Chart performance

In France "Milord" sold more than 400,000 copies. The song was a #1-hit in Germany in July 1960. In the UK it reached #16, in Sweden #1 during 8 weeks, in Norway #6. In the United States, the song peaked at #88 on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1961. By 1969, Milord has sold 25,000 copies in Austria.

Cover versions