Artist's albums
Au Théatre Des Champs-Elysées
2001 · album
embarquement immediat
2000 · album
Jazz Et Java
1999 · album
Locomotive D'Or
1997 · album
Zénith Made In Nougaro (Remasterisé 2014)
1989 · album
Pacifique (Remasterisé 2014)
1989 · album
Nougayork (Remasterisé 2014)
1987 · album
Piano Jazz & Co
2022 · compilation
Romance
2021 · compilation
Les 50 plus belles chansons
2019 · album
La boite de jazz
2019 · compilation
Autour du Jazz
2018 · compilation
Toulouse (Veronica Chante Nougaro)
2017 · single
Les 100 Plus Belles Chansons
2006 · album
Les 50 Plus Belles Chansons
2006 · compilation
Bidonville - Je Suis Sous... - Le Cinéma
2005 · album
Je Suis Sous...
2005 · album
Le Cinéma
2005 · album
Le Cinéma/Je Suis Sous...
2005 · album
La note bleue
2004 · album
Son premier album
1958 · album
Similar artists
Henri Salvador
Artist
Michel Jonasz
Artist
William Sheller
Artist
Charlelie Couture
Artist
Yves Duteil
Artist
Nino Ferrer
Artist
Eddy Mitchell
Artist
Barbara
Artist
Véronique Sanson
Artist
Serge Reggiani
Artist
Dick Annegarn
Artist
Alain Souchon
Artist
Georges Brassens
Artist
Maxime Le Forestier
Artist
Léo Ferré
Artist
Laurent Voulzy
Artist
Michel Polnareff
Artist
Julien Clerc
Artist
Jacques Higelin
Artist
Biography
Widely regarded as the singer who fused the traditions of the French chanson with the energy and verve of American jazz, Claude Nougaro was born in Toulouse on September 9, 1929. The son of an opera singer and a piano teacher, he was raised largely by his grandparents, devouring not only classical music but also the homegrown pop of Charles Trenet and Edith Piaf, and the American swing of Louis Armstrong and Glenn Miller broadcast via Radio-Toulouse. Despite his love of the arts, Nougaro never learned to read music or play an instrument, and in 1947, he briefly worked as a journalist before serving a stint in the French Foreign Legion in Morocco. After his military service wrapped he settled in Paris, dabbling in poetry and befriending the playwright Jacques Audiberti, through whom Nougaro made a number of contacts in the cabaret world. He first performed at the Montmarte club Le Lapin Agile in 1955, further raising his profile by penning lyrics for Piaf. Nougaro made his first recordings in 1958 -- although the vogue was to sing in pure French, he performed with a pronounced Toulousian accent, with thick syllables and a rhythmic depth born of his affection for American vocalists. In addition to collaborating with jazz greats including Sonny Rollins, Ornette Coleman, and Nat Adderley, during the 1960s Nougaro studied Brazilian music, working with Baden Powell and Chico Buarque -- his best-loved songs include "Je Suis Sous" ("I Am Drunk"), "Cécile, Ma Fille" ("Cecile, My Daughter"), "Jazz and Java," and "Paris Mai," penned in the wake of May 1968's anti-government student demonstrations. Although Nougaro's commercial fortunes declined during the 1970s, during the following decade he made a comeback inspired by the success of Nougaro, an album cut in New York City -- around the same time, he also experimented with African rhythms. After years of failing health, Nougaro died March 4, 2004 at the age of 74 -- after his passing, French president Jacques Chirac said "a veritable poet has left us." ~ Jason Ankeny