story of an unassailable French icon

by time news

2023-08-20 08:53:00

Far from the eyes, close to the hearts of fans, Jean-Jacques Goldman has become an unassailable icon, as shown in a book by historian Ivan Jablonka, published in a France that can still be torn around a song from the 80s .

Friday appeared the test “Goldman”, where the academic is interested in the reasons for which the singer of “I walk alone” knew a sudden popularity, and kept it while the fashions passed.

“Goldman has become consensual,” the author told AFP. It hasn’t always been the case. “He was reviled by the left intellectual press in the 1980s. There were hundreds of thousands of people who flocked to his concerts then, but for others he represented political softness, cultural capitalism, mediocrity artistic”.

Michel Sardou, from the same generation born after the war, was another target of this French intelligentsia.

At the heart for a week of a controversy born of the remarks of the singer Juliette Armanet on “Les Lacs du Connemara” (1981), which she finds “filthy” and “right-wing”, Sardou is more divisive. But in this controversy, he adopted a very Goldmanian posture: to let people speak.

“Fine you Goldmanism”

Jean-Jacques Goldman, who has been fleeing the media for twenty years, is marked on the left. “Fully aware of his political family, with a strong family tradition, his father’s involvement in the Resistance, and a half-brother (Pierre) who was a figure of the far left”, details Ivan Jablonka.

If there is one lesson to be learned from “Goldman”, it is that for the historian the song is political.

The author goes so far as to speak of “goldmanism”. He brought into it a social-democratic tradition, close to the sensitivity of the British writer George Orwell or former Prime Minister Michel Rocard, made of attention to the weakest, respect for cultural differences and the ideal of fraternity. humanist.

“The question I asked myself is: why the end of Goldmanism?”, explains the historian.

Jean-Jacques Goldman, 71, precipitated it by his refusal of the system of celebrities born with the Internet. “We live in a regime of ultravisibility, with social networks, the hunt for likes, influencers, etc. Can we imagine Goldman in this new situation? Certainly not”, declares the author of the essay.

If he did not seek to meet the singer, the author of “Laëtitia or the End of Men”, Medici Prize 2016, asked to consult his archives. “In vain, because I did not have an answer”, he remarks.

To each his own Goldman”

The book is based instead on interviews given by the singer-songwriter, where we rediscover his natural modesty, and his gentle way of exposing his convictions.

His arrival in bookstores showed the love rating that keeps the one who has been 12 times “favorite personality of the French” (annual Ifop poll for the Sunday newspaper).

In one of the weekly Le Point, conservative, “When France loved each other: the Goldman years”. Then on that of the daily Le Parisien: “Why Goldman always fascinates”. For L’Obs, classified on the left, “a captivating essay” on an artist who is “a beautiful enigma to solve”.

“To each and everyone his Goldman”, notes the historian.

His is double. Faced with skeptics, “Goldman won with the music he invented: pop-rock, this mixture of rock, pop and text song, which today influences the avant-garde of young artists”, including Juliette Armanet.

And it accompanied an evolution towards a less sexist, less racist French society. “In the 1980s, Goldman’s audience was overwhelmingly made up of young girls from working-class or suburban backgrounds, to whom he offered a model and, beyond that, a path to emancipation,” according to Ivan Jablonka.

Which admits it without difficulty: he too was a fan, and still is.

20/08/2023 08:51:47 – Paris (AFP) – © 2023 AFP

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