Le Gorille
"Le Gorille" | |
---|---|
Song by Georges Brassens | |
from the album La Mauvaise Réputation | |
Released | 1952 |
Genre | |
Length | 3:36 |
Label | Polydor |
Composer(s) | Eugène Metehen |
Lyricist(s) | Georges Brassens |
La Mauvaise Réputation track listing | |
8 tracks A-side
B-side
|
"Le Gorille" is a 1952 song by Georges Brassens, found on his album La Mauvaise Réputation.[1] It was also released as a single, with La Chasse Aux Papillons as B-side. [2][3]
Lyrics
[edit]The song describes how a group of women in a zoo observe the genitalia of a male gorilla. The animal suddenly escapes and all the women, except for a 100-year old lady, run away. This leads to the refrain of the song: "Gare au gorille!" ("Watch out for the gorilla!"). The gorilla, who is in heat, mistakes a judge in a black robe for a woman and rapes him. Brassens later reveals that this very same judge had sentenced a man to the guillotine earlier that day and now, just like the convicted criminal, screams in vain for mercy. [4]
Reception
[edit]Le Gorille was very controversial at the time of its release. First of all because of its pornographic lyrics, but secondly also because it took a stance against the death penalty when it was still in effect in France. It was banned on all French radio stations. [5][6]
Covers
[edit]Le Gorille has been covered and translated several times:
- Fabrizio De André covered it in Italian as Il Gorilla (1968) on his album Volume 3. [7]
- Yossi Banai covered it in Hebrew as הגורילה (Ha-Gorila). Dan Almagor covered it in the same language.
- Jake Thackray covered it in English as Brother Gorilla on his album Bantam Cock (1972). [8] [9]
- Franz Josef Degenhardt covered it in German as Vorsicht Gorilla (1986). [10]
- Le Gorille has been covered by French singer Renaud on his album Renaud chante Brassens (1996).
- Oulahlou covered it as Macahu, changing the gorilla with a donkey, the old lady with a young girl and the judge with a police officer. His song is a critique of the Algerian police force during the Black Spring.
- The Polish cover band Zespół Reprezentacyjny covered it as "Goryl".
- Swedish-Dutch songer Cornelis Vreeswijk covered it as Djävulens sång on his album Visor, svarta och röda (1972).
- Christos Thivaois covered it as Ο Γορίλλας ("The Gorilla").
- Joaquín Carbonell covered it in Spanish as "El Gorila" ("The Gorilla").
Sources
[edit]- ^ "Georges Brassens - 1 - la Mauvaise Réputation". Discogs. 1979.
- ^ "Georges Brassens et Sa Guitare - le Gorille / La Chasse Aux Papillons". Discogs. 1952.
- ^ "Georges Brassens et Sa Guitare - le Gorille / La Chasse Aux Papillons". Discogs. 1956.
- ^ "Comment Brassens a castré son "Gorille"". 27 October 2014.
- ^ "'Le gorille' de Georges Brassens : Critique de la peine de mort et vision erronée de l'homosexualité".
- ^ "Comment Brassens a castré son "Gorille"". 27 October 2014.
- ^ "Il Gorilla par Fabrizio de André".
- ^ "Brother Gorilla | the Official Jake Thackray Website".
- ^ "Sleeve notes to 'Bantam Cock' (1972)". jakethackray.com. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
- ^ Brunner, Erwin (8 February 1985). "ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl". Die Zeit.
- French songs
- Children's songs
- 1952 songs
- Obscenity controversies in music
- Songs about primates
- Songs about judges
- Songs about sexual assault
- Black comedy music
- Songs written by Georges Brassens
- Georges Brassens songs
- Gorillas in art
- Protest songs
- Works about capital punishment
- Opposition to the death penalty
- Censorship in France
- Works about gorillas