French Letter Music Blog
French Letter
Sep8

Written by:aidan
Saturday, September 08, 2007 

The next release by France's biggest rock band may be of its lead singer, currently serving an eight-year jail sentence for killing his film-star girlfriend in 2003. The case still generates strong emotions in France.

Bertrand CantatFrench news agencies are this week reporting that France's most famous rock star and prison inmate may soon be free on conditional release.

Bertrand Cantat, lead singer with French group Noir Désir, was jailed in 2004 for eight years after a court in Lithuania found him guilty of killing his girlfriend, actress Marie Trintignant, after hitting her during a fight in their hotel room in Vilnius in July 2003. Cantat is currently serving his sentence in a prison near Toulouse, in south-west France.

Trintignant's death, and the subsequent trial of her lover Cantat, shocked France. The award-nominated actress, daughter of actor Jean-Louis Trintignant (star of French classics like 'Un Homme Et Une Femme' and 'Trois Couleurs Rouge') was filming on location in Vilnius at the time of the incident. The Lithuanian court heard how, during a fight after a party, a drunken Cantat struck Trintignant repeatedly, causing massive cerebral trauma.

Marie TrintignantA comatose Trintignant was rushed to a specialist hospital in France but died four days later. The then-President Chirac paid tribute to the late actress; Lithuanian police charged Cantat with her murder.

The case divided France. The charismatic Cantat was a hugely-admired figure, adored by French rock fans for his politically-engaged songs and fierce rebellious outbursts. In 1997 Noir Désir played a highly-charged concert in Toulon, a city then ruled by the extreme-right Front National of Jean-Marie Le Pen, and Cantat caused uproar at a 2002 awards ceremony by criticising the head of his record company. The idea of their idealistic rock idol being an abusive partner and killer was incomprehensible to his loyal fans. Cantat, echoing the tragic romances of Othello and of Romeo and Juliet, pleaded in court that he loved Trintignant and lost control during a passionate argument. During the period of the case, Noir Désir's record sales rocketed - but many fans have never forgiven Cantat for betraying their idealism.

The death of Trintignant provoked widespread public grief - and anger. Her violent end highlighted the issue of domestic violence, and huge numbers of people attended public demonstrations and protested at a perceived lack of resources and convictions in France. The Cantat trial became akin to a test case for domestic abuse; victim support groups held massive public demonstrations around France and called for greater protection of those suffering conjugal abuse.

Noir Désir, with Cantat on the leftCantat was eventually found guilty of killing Trintignant and was sentenced to eight years in prison. A Noir Désir retrospective released in 2005 was promoted by his bandmates, who delicately referred to the 'absence' of their singer.

Trintignant was buried in Père Lachaise in Paris, final resting place of other tragic figures like Edith Piaf, Oscar Wilde and Jim Morrison. A small Seine-side square named after her lies just around the corner from Morrison's former Paris apartment in the Marais.

Noir Désir, Cantat's band, are at best an acquired taste for non-French people. Their mix of punk aggression and self-righteous protest-song posturing makes for lumpen joyless sonic sludge that values politicised lyrics over musical content. Sure enough, Cantat's fans refer to him as the French Jim Morrison or the French Jeff Buckley; this should be enough to warn away discerning music lovers.

In short, most of Noir Désir's music is awful - but there are two flashes of quality in their back catalogue. One is the vicious guitar riff of 1992 single 'Tostaky', wasted on a clumsy and tuneless song. The other is an untypically catchy acoustic pop song that was a massive hit across the continent in 2001; it's called 'Le Vent Nous Portera' ('The Wind Will Carry Us'):

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8 comment(s) so far...

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

"Trintignant's death, and the subsequent trial of her lover Cantat, shocked France."
i am still shocked and can't understand what happened. Cantat is my model, my hero, i fell in love with him and his music when i was 11 when the song Tostaky was released. i became interested by literature, poetry, theatre, philosophy thanks to him. i learned spanish (and not german) because he was saying some words of spanish in tostaky. he is the main reason for me being who i am now.
this man is a legend for me. what he did, i still can't believe it, i am still very emotional when people talked about him as a murderer. and i am still imagining the pain and the torture he must have gone through when he realised what he did to the woman he loved.

him being released, i am happy about it, hope he is going to release the thousands songs he wrote in jail so it might help me understand his act...

By Edith on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

Edith, thanks for that excellent comment, you expressed really well what a lot of people in France still feel - bravo. On the TV news last night Cantat's lawyer that he may be free at the end of next week - and that he plans to release new music very soon. I'm not a Noir Désir fan but this is still a sad and fascinating story...

By aidan on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

" most of Noir Désir's music is awful " !!!! Did you write it to get people to react or do you really mean it ????

By jh on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

jh, I really mean it. I don't remember you having any Noir Désir CDs in your collection...

By aidan on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

I had plenty of them but you were probably to busy listening to Suede !!!!!

By jh on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

Jonathan Richman, actually :D

By aidan on   Friday, September 14, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

I was and still am a fan of Noir desir. Nice article, but the bad side is you say that their music is awful: In that case, you should say that you don't like what they were doing, rather than a very subjective point of view. Noir desir got millions of fans all over french speaking countrys. It seems that you are more after the gossip than the talent itself.
I would not call Suede music awful, I would just say I don't like it.
At least respect the art if not the person. :) Nuff said.

cheers,
Mat.

By Mat on   Monday, September 24, 2007

Re: Jailed French singer soon free?

Mat: thanks for the comment. however, me saying I don't like them is just as valid as you saying you like them. If I write an article saying they're awful, then it's obviously my point of view. You'll just have to accept it.

By aidan on   Monday, September 24, 2007

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