I hope you relax, reminisce about good, happy memories. And happiness will come to you. Tracklist: 01. La Reine de Saba (0:02) 02. La maison est en ruine (03:04) 03. Night flight (06:15) 04. Cadet rousselle (09:11) 05. Piccola fantasia (11:05) 06. Imagine (14:38) 07. My love (18:05) 08. The impossible dream (21:14) 09. Love is blue (24:00) 10. Yesterday once more (27:07) 11. Sans toi je suis seul (31:13) 12. Little girl (34:44) 13. Let me try again (37:58) 14. Concerto pour une voix (41:15) 15. 13 jours en France (44:44) 16. Adagio cardinal (47:36) 17. Appres toi (50:17) 18. Hokkaido symphonie 1st (53:53) 19. Hokkaido symphonie 2nd (57:55) 20. Hokkaido symphonie 3th (62:05) Thank you for watching! Raymond Lefèvre (20 November 1929 – 27 June 2008) was a French easy listening orchestra leader, arranger and composer. Born on 20 November 1929 in Calais, France, Raymond Lefèvre is best known for his interpretation of the 1968 theme “Soul Coaxing (Ame Caline)“ (composed by Michel Polnareff), which became an international hit.[2] He also wrote soundtracks for movies with Louis de Funès such as La Soupe Aux Choux (1981) or the series Le Gendarme de Saint Tropez. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, he accompanied Dalida on most of her recordings (Bambino, Por Favor, Tu peux tout faire de moi, Quand on n'a que l'amour), amongst many others. He started his musical career in 1956 on the Barclay Records label. His recordings were released in the United States on the Kapp and Four Corners record labels until 1969. He was accepted at the Paris Conservatory when 17 years old. During the early 1950s he played the piano for the Franck Pourcel orchestra. In 1953 he played the piano at the Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles. He started his musical career in 1956 on the Barclay label and recorded his debut album that year. He worked on the French television programmes Musicorama (1950s) and Palmarés des Chansons (1965, 1966, 1967) accompanying such famous artists as Dalida, Claude François, Richard Anthony, with his own orchestra. His recording of “The Day the Rains Came“ was a best seller in the United States in 1958.[2] The song “Ame câline“ (Soul Coaxing) became an international hit in 1968 and “La La La (He Gives Me Love)“ - an instrumental adaptation of 1968's Eurovision Song Contest's winning song by Spanish singer Massiel - was a minor hit in 1968 in Canada and the United States. In 1969, his recording of “La Reine de Saba“ (Queen of Sheba) became a big hit in Japan. From 1972 until the early 2000s, he undertook several successful tours of Japan. He worked on the soundtracks of many Louis de Funès movies. (Wikipedia)
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