Les sucettes
"Les Sucettes" ("Lollipops") is a French pop song written by Serge Gainsbourg and first recorded by France Gall in 1966. One of Gall's biggest hits, it was an unusually risqué song for its time, containing numerous sexually-charged double-entendres, although she had said that she was unaware of this at the time.[1][2] Meaning"Les Sucettes" is, on the surface, a yé-yé song about a girl named Annie who likes anise-flavored lollipops; the lyrics play with the homophony of "Annie" and "anis" (anise). However, the lyrics are laden with double-entendres referring to fellatio, such as a line about barley sugar running down Annie's throat. The very noun for lollipop in French, "sucette", is the substantivised verb "sucer", sucking; the title and the refrain ("Annie aime les sucettes", "Annie loves lollipops") are far more evocative in French than in the English translation. A possible translation to preserve the innuendo would be "Annie loves suckers". The line "pour quelques pennies" (for a few pennies) can also be heard as "pour quelques pénis" (for a few penises).[citation needed] Music videoA promotional video clip for the song was directed by Jean-Christophe Averty for the TV show Au risque de vous plaire ("At the Risk of Pleasing You"). The clip echoed the song's sexual subtext, with footage of dancers in phallic lollipop costumes interspersed with cutaways of young women suggestively sucking on lollipops.[2] Another video was filmed, featuring Gall herself in a schoolgirl uniform singing the song.[citation needed] ReactionUpon its release, the song was a success in France and Belgium. In France, it entered the charts at #30 on July 15,[3] and by the following week, it had climbed to its peak of #9.[4] Gall had said that she did not understand the song's subtext when she recorded it at age 18.[5] By Gall's account, she did not realize until later why the filming of the clip attracted so many visitors to the set.[2] She was then extremely upset – "mortified, hiding herself away for weeks, refusing to face anyone".[6] Gall said that she had sung Gainsbourg's songs "with an innocence of which I'm proud" and "was pained to then learn that he had turned the situation to his advantage, mocking me."[6] In a 2001 television interview, Gall said that she had felt "betrayed by the adults around me" afterwards.[2] Gainsbourg called the song "the most daring song of the century" in an interview with the magazine Rock and Folk. Charts
CoversKim Kay version
Belgian Eurodance singer Kim Kay recorded a cover of "Les Sucettes" that released in 2000 on EMI as the fourth single and as well as the opening track from her only compilation album, Hits! (2000). The single was produced by Phil Sterman and Lov Cook. Track listing
Other covers
See alsoReferences
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