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Londoners get the chance to hear how the Amelie soundtrack transfers to a live gig setting on February 5, when Tiersen, his band and The Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon play at the Royal Festival Hall.
His collaboration with Hannon goes back years. The tiny Irishman described Tiersen as his only satisfying collaborator from a range that has included chanteuse Ute Lemper and crooner Tom Jones.
"I like pretty much his work," he says. "We decided to make a cover of David Bowie's Life On Mars. We also covered his piece Geronimo. I invited him for my last album, L'Absente." The track Les Jours Tristes from this, his latest work, features Hannon singing his own lyrics with Tiersen's music underpinning them.
Tiersen has been (favourably) compared with Michael Nyman, best known for his score for the Jane Campion film The Piano. Being called "the Gallic Michael Nyman" hasn't hurt him, but he'd rather those who make such statements desist. "I like the early works of Michael Nyman," he says, "and the way to approach classical matter with another energy, closer to a rock band. But I don't think our music is very close."
His name check of musical influences features some rather more surprising artists. In the early '80s as a teenager he was influenced by the "post-punk culture" of bands like The Stooges and Joy Division.
"I like the energy of their recordings and their approach to music," he says. "It is very instinctive. They played music without care for technique and gleaned pleasure from it."
Tiersen himself is noted for cutting across musical genres with gay abandon. "It is not my job to define my music," he says. "To keep the enthusiasm for creating, an artist should not care about genres."
BUY Yann Tiersen - Amelie OST
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