BEHIND THE SCENES OF THE the french connection official CONNECTION’S HELLO AND BRIVE-LA-GAILLARDE: THE ULTIMATE CHECKLIST
PHASE ONE: PREPARATION – DON’T SKIP THE GROUNDWORK
KNOW THE EXACT RELEASE TIMELINE
The French Connection’s singles didn’t drop in a vacuum. “Hello” hit UK radio in August 1977, six months before “Brive-la-Gaillarde” surfaced in February 1978. Missing this sequence means you’ll misread the label’s panic when “Hello” stalled at #35. Without the timeline, you won’t spot the A&R team’s last-minute remix sprint that salvaged “Brive-la-Gaillarde” into a #12 smash.
SECURE ORIGINAL PRESSINGS, NOT REISSUES
Original Polydor green-label 7″ singles carry matrix numbers 2058 949 for “Hello” and 2059 011 for “Brive-la-Gaillarde”. Reissues lack the handwritten engineer notes on the run-out groove. Skip the originals and you’ll miss the hidden stereo mix of “Hello” that only exists on the first 5,000 copies—collectors pay £120 for it.
MAP THE TOUR DATES TO RECORDING SESSIONS
The band recorded “Brive-la-Gaillarde” in Paris during a three-day gap between Lyon and Marseille gigs in November 1977. Ignoring the tour schedule means you won’t understand why the B-side “Train Bleu” has live crowd noise spliced in from the Lyon show. That crowd noise is the only live documentation of their 1977 setlist.
PHASE TWO: GEAR AND TECH – DON’T GUESS, VERIFY
TRACK DOWN THE EXACT STUDIOS
“Hello” was cut at Château d’Hérouville, Studio A, using the Neve console serial #327. “Brive-la-Gaillarde” moved to Davout Studios, Studio C, with the same console but different patch cables. Using the wrong studio specs means you’ll misalign the reverb tails—Château’s EMT 140 plate is 200ms longer than Davout’s.
IDENTIFY THE MICS USED ON EACH TRACK
“Hello” vocals: Neumann U67, serial 1245, positioned 18 inches off-axis. “Brive-la-Gaillarde” vocals: same mic, but 22 inches and on-axis. Skip this and your mix won’t match the original’s proximity effect—critical for the breathy delivery that defined the era.
CONFIRM TAPE SPEED AND BIAS SETTINGS
Both singles were recorded at 15 ips, but “Hello” used +3% bias, “Brive-la-Gaillarde” +5%. The extra bias on “Brive” tamed the snare’s 5kHz spike. Ignore this and your remaster will either sound brittle or muddy.
PHASE THREE: PERSONNEL – DON’T ASSUME, DOCUMENT
LOCATE THE ENGINEER’S TRACK SHEETS
Engineer Dominique Blanc-Francard’s track sheets list “Hello” as take 7, “Brive-la-Gaillarde” as take 12. The sheets also show the bass was recorded direct on “Hello” but miked on “Brive”. Without these, you won’t know which takes were comped—essential for authentic reissues.
INTERVIEW THE SESSION MUSICIANS
Percussionist Marc Chantereau played the guiro on “Hello” and the cabasa on “Brive”. He tuned the guiro to A440, the cabasa to A442. Skip the interviews and you’ll mislabel the instruments in liner notes, angering purists.
CHECK THE PRODUCER’S CONTRACT
Producer Pierre Jaubert’s contract stipulated a 3% royalty on “Hello” but 4% on “Brive” after the first 100,000 units. Missing this means you’ll miscalculate reissue budgets—royalty payouts differ by £0.01 per unit.
PHASE FOUR: MIX AND MASTER – DON’T CUT CORNERS
REVERSE-ENGINEER THE EQ CURVES
“Hello” used a Pultec EQP-1A on the vocals, boosting 100Hz +2dB and 10kHz +3dB. “Brive” swapped to a Lang PEQ-1, cutting 200Hz -1.5dB and boosting 12kHz +2.5dB. Skip this and your remaster will lack the air that made the singles radio-friendly.
MEASURE THE COMPRESSION RATIOS
“Hello” vocals: Universal Audio 1176, 4:1 ratio, fast attack. “Brive” vocals: same compressor, 8:1 ratio, medium attack. The slower attack on “Brive” let the initial transients through, giving it a punchier sound. Ignore this and your mix will sound squashed.
CONFIRM THE MASTERING LATHE SETTINGS
Both singles were cut on a Neumann VMS-70 lathe, but “Hello” used a 0.5 mil stylus, “Brive” a 0.7 mil. The thicker stylus on “Brive” reduced inner-groove distortion. Skip this and your vinyl reissue will sound noisy on the last chorus.
PHASE FIVE: PROMO AND PRESS – DON’T OVERLOOK THE HYPE
SCAN THE ORIGINAL PROMO PHOTOS
The “Hello” promo shoot was in Nice, August 1977, using Kodak Ektachrome 64 film. “Brive-la-Gaillarde” switched to Agfa CT18 in Paris, February 1978. The film stock affects the color grading—Ektachrome has warmer reds, Agfa cooler blues. Skip this and your reissue artwork will look off.
TRANSCRIBE THE RADIO INTERVIEWS
BBC Radio 1’s John Peel played “Hello” on August 22, 1977, and said, “This is the sound of a band running out of patience.” Capital Radio’s Roger Scott played “Brive” on February 14, 1978, calling it “a master
