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・ Chanson d'amour (disambiguation)
・ Chanson d'Antioche
・ Chanson d'automne
・ Chanson d'aventure
・ Chanson days Kloster Michaelstein
・ Chanson de geste
・ Chanson de Guillaume
・ Chanson de Matin
・ Chanson de Nuit
・ Chanson de toile
・ Chanson perpétuelle
・ Chanson pour boire
・ Chanson réaliste
・ Chansonetta Stanley Emmons
・ Chansonnier
Chansonnier (singer)
・ Chansonnier Cordiforme
・ Chansonnier du Roi
・ ChansoNoir
・ Chansons (Jill Barber album)
・ Chansons (TV series)
・ Chansons (Élie Semoun album)
・ Chansons des mers froides
・ Chansons drôles de d'autres
・ Chansons d’Édith Piaf
・ Chansons madécasses
・ Chansons ou Versions Inédites de Jeunesse
・ Chansons pour ceux qui s'aiment
・ Chansons pour les mois d'hiver
・ Chansons pour les pieds


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Chansonnier (singer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Chansonnier (singer)
A chansonnier (female: chansonnière) 〔"Chansonnier definition as intended in Quebec",(Chansonniers ) in The Canadian Encyclopedia〕 was a poet songwriter, solitary singer, who sang his or her own songs (chansons) with a guitar in Quebec, Canada, during the 1960s and 1970s. Compared to the popular singer, the chansonnier needs no artifice to sing his/her soul poetry. They performed in «Les Boites à Chansons».〔"Paragraph 6, "After 1960 the boites à chansons increased in number concurrently with Quebec's Quiet Revolution, a powerful movement of economic and cultural emancipation (...)",(Chanson in Quebec ) in The Canadian Encyclopedia〕〔"Thanks to Félix Leclerc', the new Québec song (chanson) would become the natural path for the collective identity of all Quebeckers and the first Ambassador of this Society in complete mutation...",(Chanson in Quebec ) in The Canadian Encyclopedia〕〔"Boites à chansons",(Boîtes à chansons ) in The Canadian Encyclopedia〕 which were flourishing in those years. The themes of their songs varied but included nature, love, simplicity, and a social interest to improve their world. The chansonnier made way for social and political awareness during the Quiet Revolution,〔"Paragraph 8, "(Chanson in Quebec ) in The Canadian Encyclopedia〕 (La Révolution Tranquille) that led to the affirmation of Quebecers' National identity.〔"The chansonniers were making way for social and political awareness, the affirmation of Québec's growing national identity",http://books.google.ca/books?id=pJvzEzjahkQC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq=Chansonnier+and+Quebec%27s+national+identity&source=bl&ots=e866eUSUN8&sig=3r33Hnj4hcQ2FMtQrfYnaqT-LxU&hl=en&ei=Y5vPTuPYGoH40gHWroTzDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=Chansonnier%20and%20Quebec%27s%20national%20identity&f=false〕
==French-Canadian chansonniers==
''(listed alphabetically by surname)''
* Geneviève Aubin-Bertrand
* Jacques Blanchet
* La Bolduc
* Hervé Brousseau
* Monique Brunet
* Pierre Calvé
* Christine Charbonneau
* Gervaises Desbiens-Roy
* Clémence Desrochers
* Serge Deyglun
* Lorainne Diot
* Georges Dor
* Jean-Pierre Ferland
* Jean-Paul Fillion
* Louise Forestier
* Claude Gauthier
* Marc Gélinas
* Suzanne Jacob
* Pauline Julien
* Mado de L'Isle
* Jacques Labrecque
* Georges Langford
* Christian Larsen
* Marie Lavigueur
* Félix Leclerc
* Tex Lecor
* Sylvain Lelièvre
* Jacqueline Lemay
* Pierre Létourneau
* Claude Léveillée
* Raymond Levesque
* Monique Miville-Deschênes
* Priscilla
* Marie Savard
* Gilles Vigneault

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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