0
Gilbert Bécaud
Gilbert Bécaud
French singer, composer, pianist and actor
1
Claude François
Claude François
French pop singer, songwriter and dancer
2
Vladimir Cosma
Vladimir Cosma
Romanian-French Composer, violinist and conductor
3
Gilles Vigneault
Gilles Vigneault
Canadian poet and singer-songwriter
4
Pierre Barouh
Pierre Barouh
French writer-composer-singer
5
Pierre Lapointe
Pierre Lapointe
Canadian singer
6
Pierre Bachelet
Pierre Bachelet
French singer-songwriter
7
Maurane
Maurane
Belgian singer (1960-2018)
Pierre Delanoë
French songwriter, author (1918-2006)

Pierre Delanoë

Intro
French songwriter, author (1918-2006)
Genres
Awards Received
Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres‎
Music

Pierre Delanoë (16 December 1918 – 27 December 2006), born Pierre Charles Marcel Napoléon Leroyer in Paris, France, was a French lyricist who wrote thousands of songs for dozens of singers, including Dalida, Edith Piaf, Charles Aznavour, Petula Clark, Johnny Hallyday, Joe Dassin, Michel Sardou and Mireille Mathieu. Delanoë was his grandmother's maiden name.

After he obtained a law degree, Delanoë started a career as a tax collector and later a tax inspector. After World War II he met Gilbert Bécaud and began working as a lyricist. He even sang with Bécaud in clubs in the beginning, but this did not last long. He wrote some of France's most beloved songs with Bécaud, including "Et maintenant", translated into English as "What Now My Love", which was covered by artists including Agnetha Fältskog, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, the Supremes, Sonny & Cher, Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass, and the Temptations. "Je t'appartiens" ("Let It Be Me") was covered by the Everly Brothers, Tom Jones, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Nina Simone and Nofx. "Crois-moi ça durera" was covered as "You'll See" by Nat King Cole.

In addition to Bécaud, he wrote for Édith Piaf ("La Goualante du pauvre Jean"), Tino Rossi, Hugues Aufray, Michel Fugain ("Je n'aurai pas le temps", "Une belle histoire"), Nicoletta, Nana Mouskouri, Michel Polnareff, Gérard Lenorman ("La Ballade des gens heureux"), Joe Dassin ("L'Été indien", "Les Champs-Élysées", "Et si tu n'existais pas"), Nicole Rieu ("Et bonjour à toi l'artiste") and Michel Sardou ("Les Vieux Mariés", "Le France"). He wrote a passionate song about Joan of Arc in "La demoiselle d'Orléans" for Mireille Mathieu. The final lyric: "When I think of all I have given France... and she has forgotten me" was truly how the singer felt as she was made a caricature by Communists.

The song "Dors, mon amour", performed by André Claveau, for which Delanoë wrote the music but not the lyrics, won the Eurovision Song Contest 1958.

In 1955, Delanoë helped to launch Europe 1 as Director of Programs, the first French radio station to program popular music in a modern way.

He served as President of SACEM in 1984 and 1986, then from 1988 to 1990, and 1992 to 1994. He was awarded the Poets Grand Prize in 1997 by the institution.

On 31 March 2004, Delanoë was given France's highest culture award, Commandeur of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

He created some controversy in July 2006 after expressing his dislike for rap music, saying that it is "a form of expression for people incapable of making music" and "not music but vociferations, eructations (belching)".

Delanoë died of cardiac arrest in the early morning of 27 December 2006 in Poissy near Paris. He is buried in the Cimetière de Fourqueux, which is just southeast of Poissy. His wife Micheline Leroyer (née Biesel) died on 16 January 2015, aged 97, and is buried beside him. They had three children: Pierre-Denis, Sylvie, and Caroline.