Après
Après is the sixteenth studio album by American rock musician Iggy Pop. Released on 9 May 2012 through Virginia Records, it consists of cover versions of songs, predominantly French chansons and ballads with some English standards, serving as a stylistic follow-up to his 2009 album Préliminaires.[1] A limited tenth-anniversary edition was reissued on 25 November 2022, featuring a bonus track and new artwork.[2]Background and development
Conception
Iggy Pop's interest in French chansons originated with his 2009 album Préliminaires, which featured renditions of classic French standards such as "Les Feuilles Mortes (Autumn Leaves)," a song closely associated with Édith Piaf, and was inspired by the works of French author Michel Houellebecq.[3][4] This project marked Pop's deliberate shift toward exploring intimate, jazz-inflected interpretations of French music, building on his growing exposure to artists like Piaf and Serge Gainsbourg, whose chanson styles emphasized emotional depth and lyrical sophistication.[5][6] Building on this foundation, Pop conceived Après as a collection of mostly French-language covers to further delve into a softer, more crooning vocal style that contrasted sharply with his established punk rock persona.[7] The album's creation reflected Pop's desire to embrace vulnerability and elegance in performance, a direction praised by Bob Dylan, who in a 2017 interview highlighted Après as "a good record" for its unexpected and compelling approach to such material.[8] Positioned as Pop's sixteenth studio album, Après served as a semi-sequel to Préliminaires, extending its thematic exploration of French musical traditions while focusing exclusively on cover versions.[5][6] The album's cover artwork draws directly from Pop's role as the character La Conscience in the 2012 French film L'Étoile du jour (also known as Morning Star), directed by Sophie Blondy, where he portrayed a haunting, introspective figure that echoed the album's contemplative tone.[9]Label rejection
Virgin EMI Records rejected Iggy Pop's completed album Après prior to its release, citing its focus on French chanson covers and original songs as a significant departure from his established rock persona, which they believed would not appeal to his fanbase or generate sufficient commercial success.[5][10] The label expressed a preference for a more conventional rock project featuring collaborations with popular punk artists, which Pop firmly declined, stating, "A major label would have preferred that I do a rock album with popular punks... I was not going to do that!"[10] In response, Pop exercised his contractual right to self-release the album through his own imprint, Thousand Mile Inc., to preserve full artistic control and avoid further compromises. This decision allowed him to bypass major label involvement entirely, as he later reflected on the industry's role: "What has a record company ever done for me but humiliate and torment and drag me down?"[10] The independent route enabled Après to debut digitally via platforms like iTunes and the French e-commerce site Vente Privée, priced accessibly at €7 to reach listeners directly.[5] The self-release in 2012 presented notable financial and logistical hurdles for Pop, including the absence of label-backed marketing, distribution networks, and promotional budgets typical of major releases, forcing him to manage all aspects personally amid a shifting digital music landscape.[11] Without institutional support, the project relied on limited online channels, constraining physical availability and broader exposure at a time when streaming was nascent and independent artists faced high upfront costs for digital aggregation and visibility.[5] This rejection ultimately reinforced the album's intimate, low-key production approach by eliminating potential label-mandated revisions that could have altered its subdued, chanson-inspired aesthetic, allowing Pop to present Après as a personal artistic statement uncompromised by commercial pressures.[10]Recording and production
Sessions
The recording sessions for Après spanned from February 2010 to June 2011, allowing for a deliberate pace in capturing the album's intimate covers.[1] These sessions occurred across multiple locations, including Silverlake Sound in Los Angeles, Crescent Moon Studios in Miami, The Groove Room in San Rafael, and Bedford Studios. The process emphasized a relaxed, jazz-influenced atmosphere with acoustic instrumentation, brushed drums, and late-night intimacy to highlight Iggy Pop's crooning vocals on French chansons and English standards.[12][13] Producer Hal Cragin guided the tracking for the album's softer, lounge-like arrangements.[5]Production team
Hal Cragin served as the primary producer for Iggy Pop's album Après, overseeing the recording, mixing, and engineering processes while also contributing instrumentation on guitar, bass guitar, and piano across multiple tracks, which helped shape the arrangements' intimate and understated feel. Iggy Pop took a central role in the production through his lead vocals and creative direction, selecting the French chanson covers and guiding the project's focus on personal interpretation to infuse the material with his distinctive raw yet refined delivery.[14] Additional contributors included pianist Jon Cowherd, who provided elegant keyboard support on the track "Syracuse," adding a layer of sophisticated texture to the arrangement, and drummer Ben Perowsky, whose subtle, brushed drumming on tracks like "La Vie en Rose" and "Michelle" contributed to the album's relaxed, lounge-like rhythm section.[15] The overall production philosophy emphasized a suave aesthetic for these bilingual covers, blending mid-century French chanson elegance with Pop's English-speaking persona to create melodic, atmospheric renditions that evoked vintage sophistication while resisting conventional rock energy.[14]Musical style and content
Composition
Après blends elements of chanson and jazz standards with subtle soft rock influences, characterized by Iggy Pop's signature crooning vocals that evoke a mature, introspective delivery.[16][17] The album spans 28:33 minutes over 10 tracks, creating a compact listening experience that prioritizes emotional depth over expansive runtime.[18] Arrangement techniques emphasize acoustic instrumentation, including guitars, brushed drums, and occasional piano or trumpet, fostering an intimate atmosphere through minimalistic production.[12] Producer Hal Cragin's approach highlights subtle textures, such as light electric guitar solos and trio setups on select tracks, while varying band sizes—from full ensembles to smaller configurations—maintains a cohesive sense of restraint and elegance.[12][19] The inclusion of bilingual elements, with songs sung in both French and English, enhances the album's thematic flow by bridging cultural expressions of melancholy and romance, drawing from mid-century European influences without overpowering the sonic unity.[20][12]Influences and covers
Après draws heavily from the French chanson tradition and mid-20th-century standards, with Iggy Pop selecting covers that emphasize intimate expressions of romance and introspection. The album includes renditions of songs originally performed by iconic artists, allowing Pop to reinterpret their emotional depth through his distinctive gravelly baritone. Key covers encompass "Et si tu n'existais pas," originally by Joe Dassin in 1975;[21] "La Vie en rose," Édith Piaf's 1946 classic; "La Javanaise," from Serge Gainsbourg's 1963 repertoire; and English-language tracks such as "Everybody's Talkin'," first recorded by Fred Neil in 1966 and popularized by Harry Nilsson. Pop's adaptations highlight interpretive choices that infuse the originals with personal vulnerability, transforming romantic themes into reflections of melancholy and quiet reflection. For instance, his version of "La Javanaise" employs a tender crooning style, deepening the song's wistful devotion with a world-weary bass tone reminiscent of Lee Marvin. Similarly, "La Vie en rose" gains a boozy, New Orleans-inflected swagger via added trumpet accents, blending Piaf's optimism with Pop's sardonic edge. These choices underscore a thematic focus on love's bittersweet nuances and subtle sadness, evoking post-punk introspection without overt aggression.[12][23] The covers reflect Pop's evolving persona, shifting from his raw punk energy toward an intimate, vulnerable delivery that resists the "beat" of contemporary music. As Pop explained, he sought to convey "this other feeling, one that is intimate, sometimes a little sad, and does not try to beat me on the head," particularly through French songs that have endured cultural pressures. This approach elevates corny or sophisticated lyrics with emotional range, showcasing sophistication laced with irony.[24][23]Release and promotion
2012 release
Après was released on May 9, 2012, through Iggy Pop's independent label, Thousand Mile Inc., after the project was rejected by Virgin EMI.[5] The album launched in CD format as a digisleeve edition distributed primarily in France by Le Rat Des Villes, alongside availability as a digital download on platforms including iTunes.[5][25] As an independent venture without major label backing, the release encountered distribution hurdles, limiting physical copies to a small initial run in Europe and relying heavily on online sales for broader access.[5][26] Initial marketing efforts highlighted Pop's evolving artistic persona, drawing parallels to his roles in films to underscore the album's cabaret-inspired covers.[23]Promotion and marketing
The promotion of Après commenced with an announcement in Rolling Stone on April 23, 2012, which spotlighted the album's focus on French-language covers, including tracks by Serge Gainsbourg, Edith Piaf, and others, positioning it as an unexpected exploration of chanson traditions.[6] Contemporary media coverage frequently underscored the album's departure from Iggy Pop's punk persona, framing the crooner arrangements as a provocative stylistic pivot that showcased his vocal versatility in intimate, lounge-like settings.[24][5] Following the rejection by Virgin EMI, marketing strategies emphasized independent and digital avenues, with Après launching exclusively on the French online retailer Vente-Privée on May 9, 2012, before expanding to iTunes worldwide; physical distribution was restricted to a limited European CD run via Pop's own Thousand Mile Inc. label, available directly through select outlets and his website to target niche audiences.[5][11] Promotional appearances were modest, including video features and interviews where Pop elaborated on the album's suave, interpretive approach, aligning with its emphasis on emotional, cabaret-inflected delivery rather than high-energy rock spectacles.[27]2022 reissue
In 2022, Iggy Pop's 2012 album Après received a 10th-anniversary reissue as part of Record Store Day's Black Friday event, marking its first official release in the United States after an initial limited European run.[26][28] The edition was released on November 25, 2022, in limited formats including a solid pink vinyl LP pressed to 4,000 copies worldwide and a CD, both featuring deluxe packaging with an OBI strip, gatefold jacket, printed inner sleeve, and original labels.[26][29] The reissue introduced new cover art and included an exclusive poster, enhancing its collectible appeal for fans.[26] It also featured a previously unreleased bonus track, "La Vie Est Belle", a cover recorded with legendary guitarist Sacha Distel, expanding the original 10-track selection to 11 songs.[29][30] Iggy Pop personally endorsed the reissue, describing Après as "a beautiful little album" from ten years prior and highlighting the occasion through Record Store Day to bring it back to audiences.[31] This effort aimed to revive interest in the out-of-print record, introducing its intimate, crooner-style covers to newer listeners during a phase of Pop's enduring career marked by continued artistic exploration.[28][26]Reception
Critical reception
Upon its 2012 release, Après received generally positive reviews for Iggy Pop's unexpected transformation into a crooner, with critics praising his gravelly baritone delivery on the album's covers of French chansons and English standards. In a four-out-of-five-star review, Louder Sound lauded the collection as one of Pop's "most musically lush and emotionally sophisticated works to date," highlighting his bass-baritone treatment of songs by Serge Gainsbourg, George Brassens, Cole Porter, and even The Beatles, while noting the bilingual approach added emotional depth to tracks like Édith Piaf's "La Vie en Rose."[23] Similarly, MVRemix described the album as "quirky and fun" despite its brooding tone, emphasizing how Pop's deep baritone crooner voice— a stark departure from his punk drawl—proved surprisingly well-suited to jazz standards and folk classics, including a take on Yoko Ono's "I'm Going Away Smiling."[7] Some reviews offered mixed assessments, appreciating the boldness of the project but critiquing its eccentricities. Rocksucker acknowledged the light-hearted intent behind Pop's exaggerated vibrato but found it overdone and self-indulgent after a few tracks, rating the album one-and-a-half out of five quails and questioning the necessity of covers like The Beatles' "Michelle" in such a stylistic shift.[32] Louder Than War, however, celebrated the crooning vocals and soft melodies for evoking a "suave" mid-century French aesthetic, though it noted the material's distance from Pop's punk roots might alienate some fans.[20] The album garnered notable endorsements that underscored its vulnerability and artistic risk-taking. In a 2017 interview, Bob Dylan praised Après as "a good record."[33] Rolling Stone echoed this sentiment in coverage of Dylan's comments, noting the album's appeal as a French-language project that showcased Pop's range beyond his rock persona.[34] Following the 2022 tenth-anniversary reissue on pink vinyl for Record Store Day Black Friday, retrospective views positioned Après as a key example of Pop's genre-spanning discography, emphasizing its role in his late-career exploration of chanson and standards. In a 2023 review of Pop's Every Loser, Rolling Stone referenced Après alongside 2009's Préliminaires as emblematic of his affinity for elegant, non-punk covers that reveal a maturing vulnerability.[35] The New York Times similarly highlighted it in a 2023 profile as part of Pop's "stately, melancholy" phase, underscoring its place in his diverse output of experimental reinventions.[36]Commercial performance
The initial 2012 release of Après was confined to France via the independent label Ventes Privées, limiting its commercial reach and resulting in no major chart entries outside the country. The album debuted and peaked at number 5 on the French Albums Chart and remained on the chart for 7 weeks.[37] The 2022 reissue, marking the album's 10th anniversary and including a bonus track, entered the German Albums Chart (Offizielle Top 100) on December 2, 2022, peaking at number 61.[38] Compared to Iggy Pop's rock-oriented albums like Lust for Life, which sold over 100,000 copies worldwide, Après maintains a modest commercial footprint, attributable to its niche focus on French chanson covers rather than mainstream rock.[39] Following the reissue, the album expanded its long-term digital availability on streaming platforms such as Spotify, contributing to sustained listener access.[40]Credits
Track listing
The 2012 edition of Après contains ten tracks, all covers except the closing original, with a total runtime of 28 minutes and 17 seconds.| No. | Title | Duration | Songwriter(s) | Original artist |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Et si tu n'existais pas" | 3:33 | Music: Toto Cutugno, Pasquale Losito; Lyrics: Vito Pallavicini (original Italian), Pierre Delanoë, Claude Lemesle (French adaptation) | Joe Dassin[15] |
| 2 | "La Javanaise" | 2:30 | Serge Gainsbourg | Serge Gainsbourg[15] |
| 3 | "Everybody's Talkin'" | 2:48 | Fred Neil | Fred Neil |
| 4 | "I'm Going Away Smiling" | 2:38 | Yoko Ono | Yoko Ono[15] |
| 5 | "La vie en rose" | 2:06 | Music: Louiguy; Lyrics: Édith Piaf | Édith Piaf |
| 6 | "Les passantes" | 3:23 | Music: Georges Brassens; Lyrics: Antoine Pol | Georges Brassens[15] |
| 7 | "Syracuse" | 3:30 | Music: Henri Salvador; Lyrics: Bernard Dimey | Henri Salvador[15] |
| 8 | "Only the Lonely" | 2:37 | Roy Orbison, Joe Melson | Roy Orbison |
| 9 | "La chanson des vieux amants" | 2:13 | Jacques Brel | Jacques Brel |
| 10 | "Symphony of Goodbye" | 2:59 | Iggy Pop, Hal Cragin | Original to album[41] |