Alain Lubrano

Born in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, on April 2, 1964, Alain Lubrano moved to Bordeaux in 1987 after forming a rock band in Paris and working in a recording studio, where he learned production techniques. Back in the Paris region, he was assistant sound engineer at the Guillaume Tell studio in Suresnes, and took part in sessions for Françoise Hardy's album Décalages. From then on, the technician, composer and musician began collaborating with the singer, for whom he wrote the track "Et si ça fait mal" (1993), before supervising the production of the album Le Danger (1996) and the following Clair-Obscur (2000), Tant de Belles Choses (2004), Parenthèses (2006) and La Pluie Sans Parapluie (2010). Between these sessions, Alain Lubrano recorded what was to remain his only pop-rock album, Eaux Troubles (1992), from which is taken the track "Dormir debout", one of nine songs written by Françoise Hardy. The same year, he took part in the Urgence collective album, bringing together twenty-seven artists to raise funds for AIDS research. In 2003, it was Jacques Dutronc's turn to call on his services for the album Madame l'Existence. Hospitalised for heart surgery, Alain Lubrano died on May 28, 2011 at the age of 47.

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