After a stage accident in Stockholm on 28 May 1958, the French chanson singer Édith Piaf felt well enough to go on tour in July 1958. During a visit to a restaurant in Cannes, she submitted some ideas to her new boyfriend Georges Moustaki, from which he was to write songs. One of them included a love affair on a gloomy Sunday in London. Moustaki then wrote down the word "Milord" ("my lord") on a paper napkin. From this initial idea, he wrote the entire text of the play, in which the upper-class British milord is abandoned by his wife and comforted by a harbour girl. She asks him to stop crying ("ne pleurez pas, Milord"), but feels only a shadow on the street ("ombre de la rue"). Moustaki then asked Piaf's friend and main composer Marguerite Monnot for a corresponding melody. Later, Moustaki explained that the melody contrasts through its major and minor passages, alternating waltz, foxtrot and Charleston rhythms.
Pro zemi Celosvětově existuje samostatná webová stránka Stretta. Pokud má být vaše objednávka doručena do této země, můžete se na tuto stránku přepnout, aby se správně zobrazily dodací lhůty a přepravní podmínky. Váš nákupní košík a zákaznický účet zůstávají zachovány.
Přejít na Stretta Music CelosvětověZůstat na Stretta Music Česká republika