Post by Cool on Aug 1, 2006 17:22:37 GMT 7
Zinedine Zidane's infamous World Cup headbutt has inspired a song that, thanks to the internet, has rocketed to the top of the French pop charts.
It took less than 24 hours for the song's producers to receive a flood of calls from music industry professionals and mobile phone companies.
The hit was written as a "joke... to entertain our friends," said Sebastien Lipszyc of La Plage Records.
The small studio e-mailed the song the day after France lost to Italy.
The French star, affectionately known as "Zizou" in France, was banned for three games and fined £3,260 for head-butting Italy's Marco Materazzi during the World Cup final.
Fifa also suspended Materazzi for two games and fined him £2,170 for provoking Zidane, who was playing in the last game of his career.
Overnight success
Mr Lipszyc, whose company composes advertising jingles and sound-effects, said Coup de Boule (Headbutt) was written "in half an hour" and e-mailed to about 50 friends. That evening, he and his two colleagues heard it on Skyrock, a popular French radio network
"The next day, the major players rang us," said Mr Lipszyc, quoted by the French newspaper Le Figaro.
He said Warner made the best offer to distribute the song - an advance of 45,000 euros for the clip, percentages on the sales and a guarantee that La Plage Records would retain authorship.
The hit was distributed to 20 countries and a video clip was made at the Charlety stadium in Paris.
According to Warner Music France president Thierry Chassagne, "all this took two weeks - that's unprecedented in our industry".
The African-style song has become a tube de l'été (summer hit) in France, booming out at beaches, campsites and bars.
Zidane, il l'a frappé, la Coupe, on l'a ratée (Zidane hit him, the Cup - we missed it), the song goes.
www.coupdeboule.net/
It took less than 24 hours for the song's producers to receive a flood of calls from music industry professionals and mobile phone companies.
The hit was written as a "joke... to entertain our friends," said Sebastien Lipszyc of La Plage Records.
The small studio e-mailed the song the day after France lost to Italy.
The French star, affectionately known as "Zizou" in France, was banned for three games and fined £3,260 for head-butting Italy's Marco Materazzi during the World Cup final.
Fifa also suspended Materazzi for two games and fined him £2,170 for provoking Zidane, who was playing in the last game of his career.
Overnight success
Mr Lipszyc, whose company composes advertising jingles and sound-effects, said Coup de Boule (Headbutt) was written "in half an hour" and e-mailed to about 50 friends. That evening, he and his two colleagues heard it on Skyrock, a popular French radio network
"The next day, the major players rang us," said Mr Lipszyc, quoted by the French newspaper Le Figaro.
He said Warner made the best offer to distribute the song - an advance of 45,000 euros for the clip, percentages on the sales and a guarantee that La Plage Records would retain authorship.
The hit was distributed to 20 countries and a video clip was made at the Charlety stadium in Paris.
According to Warner Music France president Thierry Chassagne, "all this took two weeks - that's unprecedented in our industry".
The African-style song has become a tube de l'été (summer hit) in France, booming out at beaches, campsites and bars.
Zidane, il l'a frappé, la Coupe, on l'a ratée (Zidane hit him, the Cup - we missed it), the song goes.
www.coupdeboule.net/