Name Hugues Aufray | Role Singer-songwriter | |
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Movies My Summer in Provence, Le insaziabili Siblings Pascale Audret, Jean-Paul Auffray Albums Aufray chante Dylan, Troubador Since 1948, Little Troubadour, New Yorker, Les 100 plus belles chansons Profiles |
Hugues aufray hasta luego
Hugues Aufray (born Hugues Jean Marie Auffray on 18 August 1929 in Neuilly-sur-Seine) is a French singer-songwriter and guitarist. His songs are often poetic, evocative of travel, friendship, brotherhood, respect.
Contents
- Hugues aufray hasta luego
- Hugues aufray debout les gars
- Early life
- Musical career
- Main EPs and singles
- DVDs
- References

Aufray is well known for his French covers of Bob Dylan's songs. He was the first French singer to cover Bob Dylan's works. Aufray knew Dylan and his work from his time in New York, as well as from record shops, and his translations capture the rawness of the original songs.
His most famous original songs are "Santiano", "Céline", "Stewball", "Hasta luego" and in Spanish, "Barco de Papel".
Hugues aufray debout les gars
Early life
He was born to Henry Auffray, an industrialist and Amyelle de Caubios d'Andiran, a musician, second cousin of the French author François Mauriac (respectively by their maternal grandfather and maternal grandmother). His sister was actress Pascale Audret (1936–2000) and his niece is actress Julie Dreyfus.
Once Aufray's parents divorced, the family left Paris for Sorèze, where he was raised by his mother. During the war, he studied at Sorèze secondary school.
In 1945, Aufray joined his father in Madrid, living there for three years. He attended the Lycée Français de Madrid in Madrid, and graduated with his baccalauréat. He then returned to France to start singing in Spanish.
Musical career
He first began writing songs for French singers. After finishing second in a singing competition · , he signed a record deal in 1959 with Eddie Barclay.
From there, he went on to co-write and arrange many songs, drawing influence from folk, blues and rock. While supporting Peter, Paul and Mary in New York in 1962, he struck up a friendship with Bob Dylan, who would then visit him in Paris in 1964. Aufray translated many of Dylan's songs into French: their appearance on his 1965 album Aufray chante Dylan helped form the tastes of the new French generation.
Aufray represented Luxembourg in the 1964 Eurovision Song Contest, performing "Dès que le printemps revient" and finishing fourth.
In 1966, he sang Les Crayons de Couleur in support of Martin Luther King at an anti-racism benefit.
In 1984, he sang a duet with Bob Dylan at a concert in Grenoble, and performed with him in Paris as well.