Varieties
Pop music holds a special place in popular history: accessible, melodic, and often timeless, it accompanies the daily lives and memories of entire generations. On vinyl, it reveals itself in all its warmth and authenticity, from early microgrooves to more recent productions.
From elegant crooners to the great voices of French pop, as well as international pop hits and retro pop treasures, these records bring together a rich and eclectic heritage. They include the catchy tunes of the 60s as well as the hits that marked the following decades, not to mention contemporary performers who are revitalizing the genre.
Each pop vinyl record is a musical madeleine: it tells stories of love, celebration, or nostalgia, and transports everyone back to moments in their lives. These pressings are all witnesses to a popular culture that has spanned the ages and continues to unite a large audience.
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French variety music on vinyl: More than a genre, an emotional heritage
The roots of French variety: From the post-war years to the golden age
French variety music traces its roots to the realist chanson of Édith Piaf and Charles Trenet, but it truly came into its own after the Second World War. The cabarets of Paris’s Left Bank gave rise to a generation of singer-songwriters, Georges Brassens, Jacques Brel, Barbara, Léo Ferré, who elevated lyrics to the level of literature. Vinyl became the essential medium for this revolution: 10-inch and later 12-inch LPs entered homes across France, turning listening into a domestic ritual. The record sleeves, often designed by talented photographers and illustrators, contributed to the mythology of artists whose faces graced the first true albums in the modern sense of the word.
Landmark artists and essential albums
It would be impossible to discuss French variety without mentioning Jacques Brel and his legendary Olympia 64, where Amsterdam brought the house down, or Barbara with her masterful Dis, quand reviendras-tu ?. Serge Gainsbourg shattered conventions with Histoire de Melody Nelson (1971), a cult concept album whose original Philips pressings are now highly sought after by collectors. The 1970s saw the emergence of Michel Berger (Beauséjour), Véronique Sanson (Amoureuse) and Alain Souchon (Jamais content), who brought harmonic sophistication and intimacy to the fore. The 1980s crowned France Gall (Babacar), Jean-Jacques Goldman (En passant) and Francis Cabrel (Sarbacane), whose vinyl records sold in the hundreds of thousands and remain widely available on the second-hand market, a blessing for anyone wishing to rediscover the warm grain and analogue dynamics of these immaculately produced records.
Legendary labels, pressings and collector’s tips
Each label has its own sonic signature: Barclay for rounded bass (Brel, Ferré, Nougaro), Philips for crystalline clarity (Gainsbourg, Barbara, Souchon), CBS for rock-infused punch (Goldman, Cabrel), and Pathé-Marconi for the velvety texture of the sixties. Original French pressings from the 1960s and 1970s remain the most sought-after: a first-edition matrix number in the dead wax, combined with a non-laminated sleeve for the earliest releases, is what collectors prize most. Recent reissues, often on 180-gram vinyl, offer a quality alternative for more modest budgets. This is where Vinyles.com comes into its own: by comparing prices across multiple partner merchants, our platform helps you track down the right edition at the right price, whether you are after a rare original or a carefully mastered reissue.
