5-494: Catherine Ferry may refer to: Catherine Ferry (singer) , French singer Catherine Ferry (East River) , a former ferry in New York City Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Catherine Ferry . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
10-647: The Eurovision Song Contest , Catherine Ferry represented France with the song " Un, deux, trois " (Tony Rallo/ Jean Paul Cara ). She ranked second in the contest. Among the backing vocalists was Daniel Balavoine , who wrote the B side "Petit Jean". She worked and was produced mainly by Daniel Balavoine a famous French singer who wrote nearly 30 songs for her. In 1977, she took part in the Yamaha Festival in Japan. In 1982, she released at WEA
15-501: The French lyrics of a song originally written for Frida of Abba. Jean-Jacques Goldman wrote the lyrics of "Quelqu'un Quelque part". Ferry then took time off to have a family. In the spring of 2010, things came full circle, with Catherine Ferry returning to Geneva in order to record her new single "Petit Jean" with John Woolloff, the guitar player of the late Daniel Balavoine. As her songs became "cult" favourites, one of them, "1, 2, 3",
20-420: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Catherine_Ferry&oldid=932754932 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Catherine Ferry (singer) Catherine Ferry (born 1 July 1953) is a French singer. In 1976, at
25-511: The song "Bonjour, Bonjour" (Linda Lecomte/Balavoine). In 1983, she participated in the musical fairy tale "Abbacadabra" by Alain Boublil based on ABBA 's songs. In 1984, the album "Vivre avec la musique" was released, produced by Andy Scott, with music by Daniel Balavoine, Joe Hammer and Michel Rorive, lyrics of Daniel Balavoine, Linda Lecomte, Patrick Dulphy, Bernard Balavoine and Francis Wauthers. Balavoine died in 1986, having failed to finish
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