The “Golden Hits Of The 60s“
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PAUL MAURIAT
“LOVE IS BLUE”
(Andre Popp, Pierre Cour)
Philips 40495
No. 1 February 10, 1968
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No one expected fireworks and bliss from the union of Paul Mauriat and an innocent item called
”L’Amor Est Bleu” (“Love Is Blue”). In 1967, the tune was selected to represent Luxembourg at the
annual Eurovision Song Contest. Vicky Leandros sang the number at the festival, where it came in
fourth; on record, even recorded in 19 languages, it sold only mildly. No instrumental had topped the
American charts in more than five years, and no born-in-France single had ever reached number one on
the pop charts. In short, no one expected Mauriat’s mood music to pillage the charts, but the dulcet
ditty did.
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Born in 1925, Paul Mauriat grew up in a house full of music. When he was four years old, Mom and Dad
taught him how to have his way with a piano. At the age of 10, when his family moved to Paris, he
enrolled in the Conservatoire. And by his 17th year, Paul was leading an orchestra and touring Europe’s
concert halls. He soon found a nice niche arranging, conducting, and producing artists like Charles
Aznavour and himself. In 1962, under a pseudonym (Del Roma Mauruit) Paul co-wrote “Chariot” a
major European hit for Petula Clark. The following year-retitled “I Will Follow Him”–the ditty topped
the U.S. charts by Little Peggy March.
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