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He also published an autobiography titled ''La chanson qui m'a tué''.<ref name=qim/> As a producer, he has worked with a number of artists and in films. He directed Orchestre de l'Opéra national de Paris. In the late 1980s, he opened a musical bar Le Soph. In 2003 he released an album of covers titled ''Marc Hamilton chante Aznavour'' in tribute of the French singer [[Charles Aznavour]]. He is active in charity founding ''Maison Marc Hamilton'' in [[Mauricie]], [[Quebec]].
He also published an autobiography titled ''La chanson qui m'a tué''.<ref name=qim/> As a producer, he has worked with a number of artists and in films. He directed Orchestre de l'Opéra national de Paris. In the late 1980s, he opened a musical bar Le Soph. In 2003 he released an album of covers titled ''Marc Hamilton chante Aznavour'' in tribute of the French singer [[Charles Aznavour]]. He is active in charity founding ''Maison Marc Hamilton'' in [[Mauricie]], [[Quebec]].

In 2007, a collective of artists under the name JohnE-5 released a tribute album to Hamilton interpreting many of his songs under the album title ''Comment ça va Marc Hamilton''.


==Discography ==
==Discography ==

Revision as of 17:20, 24 June 2017

Marc Hamilton (born in Matane, Quebec on 2 February 1944) is a French Canadian singer.

In 1993, at the age of 19, and the height of the Beatles success of the sixties, and Beatle-inspired francophone bands of the sixties, he formed the 4-member Les Shadols, writing six original songs released on three consecutive singles.[1] In 1965, he launched his band Les Monstres. As a solo release, he found some success with his single "Je n'apprendrai pas le violon". In 1969, he joined with his Shadol bandmate Normand Bouchard with two singles "Nous avons marché" and "J'irai un jour à Paris".

He is best known however for his 1970 hit "Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer" that was a big hit in Quebec and in France where it reached number 1 on the French Singles Chart on 12 September 1970 staying on top of the French chart for three consecutive weeks. It was also number 1 in Belgium, number 2 in Switzerland and reached number 14 in the Dutch chart. The single that was subject to further covers by Jean-François Michaël in 1970, musical covers by Grand orchestre de Paul Mauriat and by Georges Jouvin, and an English-language cover entitled "Time"by Canadian singer Marty Butler . Later covers included notably one by Roch Voisine in 1993 and another by Mitsou in 1994. In 2003, it was crowned in a list of "Grands Classiques de la chanson québécoise" (Great classics of Quebec songs) by SOCAN. The SODRAC (Société du Droit de Reproduction des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs au Canada) considered it as a great song of Quebec. For commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Quebec flag, it was picked as one of all-time 50 Quebec songs ever. It was also honored by Quebec Culture Minister Line Beauchamp and by la Fondation de la SPAC. On 27 January 2007, it was entered into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame.

As a follow-upon his fame, he also released the single "Tapis magique".

In 1973, as a result of an accident, he lost his left eye. But he persevered in musical projects notably programming for the activities of Grand salon de Mascouche. In the early 1980s, he had some success with various releases including the single "Peau de femmes". He released three albums in this period,Peau de femmes (1981), J'ai un bon deal (1984) a musical comedy directed on stage by Roger Pilon and J'ai un rendez-vous d'amour (1987)

He also published an autobiography titled La chanson qui m'a tué.[1] As a producer, he has worked with a number of artists and in films. He directed Orchestre de l'Opéra national de Paris. In the late 1980s, he opened a musical bar Le Soph. In 2003 he released an album of covers titled Marc Hamilton chante Aznavour in tribute of the French singer Charles Aznavour. He is active in charity founding Maison Marc Hamilton in Mauricie, Quebec.

In 2007, a collective of artists under the name JohnE-5 released a tribute album to Hamilton interpreting many of his songs under the album title Comment ça va Marc Hamilton.

Discography

Albums

  • Marc Hamilton (1970)
  • Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer (1970)
  • Au fond des choses (1972)
  • Peau de femmes (1981)
  • J'ai un bon deal (1984)
  • J'ai un rendez-vous d'amour (1987)
  • Malgré les murs (1996)
  • Rétrospective (1996)
  • Marc Hamilton chante Aznavour (2003)

Singles

Year Song Peak positions Album
BEL
(Vl)

[2]
FR
NED
SWI
[3]
1970 "Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer" 1 1 14 2 Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer

Books published

  • La chanson qui m'a tué (2005)

References

  1. ^ a b Quebec Info Musique: Marc Hamilton - Notes biographiques Template:Fr icon
  2. ^ "Ultratop - Marc Hamilton - "Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer" page". Ultratop.com. Retrieved 2017-05-24.
  3. ^ "Hitparade - Marc Hamilton - "Comme j'ai toujours envie d'aimer" page". Hitparade.ch. Retrieved 2017-05-24.