Qui a repris l'hymne à l'amour ?

Qui a repris l'hymne à l'amour ?

Qui a repris l'hymne à l'amour ?

Le groupe Cyclope l'a reprise en 1984. Mireille Mathieu reprend cette chanson sur son album Mireille Mathieu chante Piaf sorti en 1993, en 2003 puis en 2012. 1995 : Johnny Hallyday pendant le Lorada Tour. Alain Barrière l'a interprétée en 2007 dans son album Chansons françaises.

Qui a écrit l'hymne à l'amour pour Edith Piaf ?

Édith Piaf Geoffrey Parsons Hymne à l’amour/Paroliers

Qui a chanté l'amour ?

Marcel Mouloudji L'Amour, l'amour, l'amour/Artistes

Où est mort Cerdan ?

Pico da Vara, Portugal Marcel Cerdan/Lieu de décès

Comment est mort Michel Cerdan ?

Accident aérien Marcel Cerdan/Cause de la mort Marcel Cerdan le 12 octobre 1948 . Marcel Cerdan est un boxeur français né le 22 juillet 1916 à Sidi Bel Abbès en Algérie et mort le 28 octobre 1949 dans un accident aérien survenu dans l'archipel des Açores.

Did Edith Piaf ever sing Hymne à l'amour?

  • " Hymne à l'amour " was translated into English by Piaf's protégé Eddie Constantine as " Hymn to Love ", which was recorded by Piaf on her album La Vie En Rose / Édith Piaf Sings In English (1956). This version was featured on Cyndi Lauper 's 2003 album At Last.

Is there a French version of Hymne à l'amour?

  • This feature is not available right now. Please try again later. "Hymne à l'amour" ("Hymn to Love" in French) is a popular French song originally performed by Édith Piaf. The lyrics were written by Piaf and the music by Marguerite Monnot.

Who was Edith Piaf's first song written for?

  • The lyrics were written by Piaf and the music by Marguerite Monnot. She first sang this song at the cabaret Versailles in New York on Septem. It was written to her lover and the love of her life, the French boxer, Marcel Cerdan.

What is Hikaru Utada's version of Hymne a l amour?

  • "Hymne à l'amour" was covered by Japanese singer-songwriter Hikaru Utada in 2010, under the name "Hymne à l'amour" (愛のアンセム, Ai no Ansemu). The title is unique to Utada's version, as most Japanese renditions have the same title as Fubuki Koshiji's 1951 cover, "Love Hymn" (愛の讃歌, Ai no Sanka).

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