Claude François’ mother was very musical and had her son take piano and violin lessons. On his own, the boy learned to play the drums. As a result of the 1956 Suez Crisis, the family returned to live in Monaco, where they struggled financially after Claude’s father fell ill and could not work. A young Claude found a job as a bank clerk and at night earned extra money playing drums with an orchestra at the luxury hotels along the French Riviera. With a good but untested singing voice, he was offered a chance to sing at a hotel in the fashionable Mediterranean resort town of Juan-les-Pins. His show was well received and eventually he began to perform at the glamorous night-clubs along the Côte d’Azur. While working the clubs, he met Janet Woolcoot, an English dancer whom he married in 1960.
Ambitious, Claude François moved to Paris, where there were many more opportunities to pursue his career. At the time, American Rock and Roll was taking hold in France and he took a job as part of a singing group in order to make a living. With the goal of eventually making it as a solo act, he paid the cost to record a 45rpm. Trying to capitalize on the American dance craze « The Twist », Claude François recorded a song titled « Nabout Twist » that proved a resounding failure. Undaunted, in 1962 he recorded a cover version in French of an Everly Brothers song, « Made to Love » (aka Girls Girls Girls). Written by Phil Everly, it had been only a minor hit in America, but Claude François’ rendition titled « Belles Belles Belles » rocked to the top of the French charts, selling close to two million copies and making him an overnight star.
Under a new manager, Claude François’ career continued to blossom. In 1963 he followed the first success with another French adaptation of an American song. This time, doing Trini Lopez’s « If I Had a Hammer » in French as « Si j’avais un marteau ». Claude François met Michel Bourdais who was working for the well-known French magazine “Salut les Copains” in English as « Hi Buddies ». He liked the rigor and the precision of Michel’s drawings and asked him to draw his portrait. This drawing has remained very famous until now. Capitalizing on his blond good looks, he mimicked Elvis Presley’s stage style as well as the slicked-back hair. Performing in sequined suits, François gave high-energy stage performances that had hordes of adoring teenage fans racing to the music shops to purchase his latest record or lining up to buy a ticket for his shows.
In 1964 he headlined at the Paris Olympia, a sign that he had arrived. At the end of that year Claude François created original new dance steps and Michel Bourdais drew them. For the first time, they brought up the idea of setting-up a show with female dancers. In January 1965, while returning from a trip to Las Vegas, Claude Francois fascinated by the American shows decided to take them as a model and eventually the project of performing on the stage with a female dancer band became clear in his mind.
A dedicated professional, Claude François worked hard to achieve success producing a string of massively popular hit songs and touring constantly. With the onslaught of Beatlemania, he covered their hits in French, adjusted the hair style a little and kept his success moving ahead. But his talent extended beyond copying the works others had made famous, and he wrote songs for himself and displayed a melodic voice doing romantic ballads.
In 1966, François created a complete new stage act using four female dancers as backup. Named « Les Clodettes, » the sexy girls danced in the background while François did his own energetic work center stage. In a return to the Paris Olympia he added eight musicians and a full orchestra to his backup dancers, putting on a spectacular show that filled every seat in the large theater and left fans standing in the street for lack of tickets.
Divorced from his wife, in 1967 he began a relationship with France Gall, another famous French singer. Their affair was short lived and he soon met Isabelle Forêt, with whom he had two sons in two years. Flushed with enormous success and confidence, he established his own record company. In 1968, he and Jacques Revaux wrote a song in French called Comme d’habitude, which became a hit in francophone countries. The song was inspired by his recent break-up with France Gall. Canadian singing star Paul Anka reworked it for the English-speaking public into the now legendary hit most famously sung by Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra as « My Way ». Although Claude François continued his successful formula of adapting English and American rock and roll hits for the French market, by the 1970s the market had changed and the disco craze that swept North America took root in France. For the versatile François, this was not a problem. He simply re-invented himself as the king of French disco, recording « La plus belle des choses, » a French version of a Bee Gees hit record.
He worked non-stop, touring across Europe, Africa and at major venues in Quebec in Canada. However, his workload caught up with him in 1971 when he collapsed on stage from exhaustion. After a brief period off, he returned to the recording studios, releasing several best-selling hits throughout the early 1970s. He expanded from owning his own record company to acquiring a celebrity magazine and a modeling agency. Although driven to achieve financial success, in 1974 he organized a concert to raise funds for a charity for handicapped children and the following year he participated in a Paris concert to raise funds for medical research. By the mid-1970s he was single again, dating several well-known European stars. He continued to perform while overseeing his numerous business interests. In 1975, while in London, he narrowly escaped death when an IRA bomb exploded and two years later a fan tried to shoot him. In 1977 and 1978, more than 15 years after his first hit record, he was still topping the musical charts with multi-million sales from hits such as « Alexandrie Alexandra » and performing to large audiences.
After working in Switzerland, on Saturday, March 11, 1978 he returned to his Paris apartment in order to appear the next day on « Rendez-vous du Dimanche » with TV host Michel Drucker. His demise was caused by his obsession with cleanliness and order. He was accidentally electrocuted when he tried to fix a broken light bulb while standing in a filled bathtub. At only 39 years of age, his early death brought a wave of public sympathy for a national French star.
Claude François owned a home near the village of Dannemois in the Essonne departement about 35 miles south of Paris. It was a place where he liked to escape to relax in the quiet countryside and it was there that he was interred in the local cemetery.
On March 11, 2000, on the 22nd anniversary of his death, Place Claude-François in Paris was named in his memory, right in front of the building where he died.
In 2004 the movie 'Podium' was released. It's a story about a Claude François impersonator (played by Benoît Poelvoorde).
His hits include Alexandrie, Alexandra; Cette Année-la; Je vais à Rio.
Chaque jour c'est la même chose
Claude François Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Le matin, je cours pour travailler
À midi je n'ai pas le temps de déjeuner
Le soir j'avale trois petits comprimés pour oublier que
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
La vie n'est pas toujours rose oh ho, chaque jour c'est la même chose
Je dois descendre pour promener le chien
J'en profite pour acheter le journal et le pain
Le dimanche, je fais la grasse matinée
Je mets ma chemise blanche toute fraîche, repassée pour oublier que
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
La vie n'est pas toujours rose oh ho, chaque jour c'est la même chose
Oui, bien sûr, sans arrêt on se plaint
On dit ci on dit ça, c'est parlé pour rien
Sa petite vie tranquille malgré tout on y tient
Il ne faut pas oublier son train-train quotidien car on aime bien quand
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
La vie n'est pas toujours rose oh ho, chaque jour c'est la même chose
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
La vie n'est pas toujours rose oh ho, chaque jour c'est la même chose.
The song “Chaque jour c'est la même chose” by Claude François talks about the monotony of everyday life. The lyrics depict the daily routine of an everyday, average person, who barely gets any sleep, rushes to work in the morning, skips lunch due to lack of time and takes pills to forget everything. The singer then walks the dog every day, buys the newspaper and bread, and enjoys sleeping in on Sundays. Despite feeling the monotony of life, the singer continues with their daily routine, accepting their mundane life.
The chorus of the song emphasizes the repetition of life with the lines “Chaque jour c'est la même chose” (Every day it’s the same thing) and “La vie n'est pas toujours rose” (Life isn't always rosy). The bridge of the song highlights how people continuously complain about their lives and talk about pointless things, but they still enjoy their daily routine.
The song identifies with the common struggles and frustrations of people's daily routines, making it relatable to ordinary people. It also carries a message of acceptance and acknowledgement of the mundanity of life.
Line by Line Meaning
Toutes les nuits, je ne dors pas assez
I don't get enough sleep every night
Le matin, je cours pour travailler
I hurry in the morning to go to work
À midi je n'ai pas le temps de déjeuner
I don't have time for lunch at noon
Le soir j'avale trois petits comprimés pour oublier que
In the evening, I take three pills to forget that
Chaque jour c'est la même chose oh ho
Every day is the same
La vie n'est pas toujours rose oh ho, chaque jour c'est la même chose
Life isn't always easy, every day is the same
Je dois descendre pour promener le chien
I have to go down to walk the dog
J'en profite pour acheter le journal et le pain
I seize the opportunity to buy the newspaper and bread
Le dimanche, je fais la grasse matinée
On Sunday, I sleep in
Je mets ma chemise blanche toute fraîche, repassée pour oublier que
I put on my freshly ironed white shirt to forget that
Oui, bien sûr, sans arrêt on se plaint
Yes, of course, we constantly complain
On dit ci on dit ça, c'est parlé pour rien
We say this and that, but it's all in vain
Sa petite vie tranquille malgré tout on y tient
Despite everything, we hold onto our peaceful little life
Il ne faut pas oublier son train-train quotidien car on aime bien quand
We must not forget our daily routine because we like it when
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind