Harley Davidson (song)
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| "Harley Davidson" | |
|---|---|
| Single by Brigitte Bardot | |
| from the album Show | |
| B-side | "Contact" |
| Released | 1967 |
| Label | Philips |
| Songwriter | Serge Gainsbourg |
| Audio | |
| "Harley Davidson" on YouTube | |
"Harley Davidson" is a 1967 song by Brigitte Bardot. It was written by Serge Gainsbourg.[1][2]
Rolling Stone describes the song as a "sixties rock & roll number about all the things that made sixties rock & roll great – motorcycles, good sex, and living fast and dying young".[3]
The lyrics "echo the imagery of Bonnie and Clyde, James Dean, and Marlon Brando".[2] Delta FM calls the song "an ode to freedom and female liberation".[4]
Writing and recording
The song was written by Gainsbourg during his short affair with Bardot.[1] According to the Swiss 24 heures, those were extremely prolific "inspired days and sleepless nights" for Gainsbourg, when he wrote several cult songs including this one.[2]
Gainsbourg recalled in a 1972 interview to Paris Match: "I suggested we listen to 'Harley Davidson'. At her place, we were like two cats, observing each other, almost in confrontation. We were overwhelmed by utter shyness and riddled with stage fright."[1] He continued: "When she sang 'Que m'importe de mourir en Harley Davidson' ('What do I care about dying on a Harley-Davidson'), those words hit me like a ton of bricks; they were incredibly sensual. On the night of the recording, our lives merged into a continuous current that nothing could divide. The flash was blinding, and our passion was magnificent.[1]
Music video
In the music video, broadcast in December 1967 as part of Brigitte Bardot's TV special,[5] she mounted a Harley-Davidson bike while dressed in a leather[6] tunic. She also wore Roger Vivier thigh-high boots. As the result, the model, called "Belle Vivier" and characterized by its slanted heel, was propelled to iconic status.[7]