Monday, 5 November 2012

Supplique pour être enterré sur la plage de Sète



Way back in the 1960's I managed to spend several days in hospital in Espalion, on the river Lot in France, having finally succumbed to my diet of bread, cheese and cheap red wine. My mate Richard was befriended by a bunch of Parisians on holiday, and when I got better, we hung about with them for a couple of days. One of these guys had a guitar which at the time was vastly intriguing for us both, and he serenaded the group with an assortment of French and English folk songs. The only song which stuck in my head was a long French one with a distinctive chordal riff between verses.

The other night I watched Les Plages d'Agnes, a film by Agnes Varda,and to my amazement this song popped up on the soundtrack at the point where her family moved to Sète during the war. George Brassens (a native of Sète) got a mention at another point in the film, so it didn't need much detective work to track the song down.

Hearing it again takes me back to the ruins on the hill in Espalion with swallowtail butterflies everywhere, and a very tender stomach.

Shortly after this I was sick all night on the train from Rodez to Paris, and our bikes got lost, but that une autre histoire.


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