Barbara Weldens (born Barbara Jacquinot, 17 April 1982 [1] – 19 July 2017) was a French singer-songwriter. After releasing her first studio album, Le grand H de l'homme (Man with a capital M), in February 2017, she died on stage the following July while performing at a festival.
Weldens was from Hérault and grew up in the circus, [2] where she learned juggling, acrobatics and trapeze. [3] She trained as a pianist at the conservatory in Sète, and earned a licence in musicology from the Paul Valéry University, Montpellier III in 2004. [4] In 2015 she won the Tremplin Découverte Chanson de Pause Guitare and in 2016 the Pic d'Or de la Chanson at Tarbes, [3] [4] the young talent award at the 2016 Jacques Brel festival [2] [5] and the prix révélation scène of the Académie Charles-Cros. [6] [7]
Inspired by Jacques Brel, Weldens was a singer in the chanson réaliste tradition. [6] She often performed in a trio with Barbara Hammadi on piano and Marion Diaques on violin. [3] On 3 February 2017, with Hammadi and Diaques, she released her first studio album, Le grand H de l'homme (Man with a capital M); [2] [5] [7] one reviewer wrote of it as "a coherent, profound, [and] powerful whole", [8] and another spoke of the precision and balance of her lyrics. [3]
Weldens was on tour and was performing in a church in the town of Gourdon in south-west France for the festival Léo Ferré when she collapsed on stage at about midnight on 19 July 2017 and was pronounced dead of cardiac arrest. She was 35. [2] [5] [6] [7] An autopsy confirmed that she had been electrocuted; she normally performed barefoot, and her foot made contact with a defective piece of electrical equipment. [9]
Le tout forme un ensemble cohérent, profond, puissant.
Barbara Weldens (born Barbara Jacquinot, 17 April 1982 [1] – 19 July 2017) was a French singer-songwriter. After releasing her first studio album, Le grand H de l'homme (Man with a capital M), in February 2017, she died on stage the following July while performing at a festival.
Weldens was from Hérault and grew up in the circus, [2] where she learned juggling, acrobatics and trapeze. [3] She trained as a pianist at the conservatory in Sète, and earned a licence in musicology from the Paul Valéry University, Montpellier III in 2004. [4] In 2015 she won the Tremplin Découverte Chanson de Pause Guitare and in 2016 the Pic d'Or de la Chanson at Tarbes, [3] [4] the young talent award at the 2016 Jacques Brel festival [2] [5] and the prix révélation scène of the Académie Charles-Cros. [6] [7]
Inspired by Jacques Brel, Weldens was a singer in the chanson réaliste tradition. [6] She often performed in a trio with Barbara Hammadi on piano and Marion Diaques on violin. [3] On 3 February 2017, with Hammadi and Diaques, she released her first studio album, Le grand H de l'homme (Man with a capital M); [2] [5] [7] one reviewer wrote of it as "a coherent, profound, [and] powerful whole", [8] and another spoke of the precision and balance of her lyrics. [3]
Weldens was on tour and was performing in a church in the town of Gourdon in south-west France for the festival Léo Ferré when she collapsed on stage at about midnight on 19 July 2017 and was pronounced dead of cardiac arrest. She was 35. [2] [5] [6] [7] An autopsy confirmed that she had been electrocuted; she normally performed barefoot, and her foot made contact with a defective piece of electrical equipment. [9]
Le tout forme un ensemble cohérent, profond, puissant.