"Lemon Incest" | |
---|---|
Single by Serge Gainsbourg and Charlotte Gainsbourg | |
from the album Love on the Beat | |
B-side | "Hmm hmm hmm" |
Format | 7" single, CD maxi, CD single |
Recorded | 1984 |
Genre | Synthpop |
Length | 5:12 |
Label | Philips |
Writer(s) | Serge Gainsbourg, Frédéric Chopin |
Producer(s) | Philippe Lerichomme, Billy Rush |
"Lemon Incest" is a song written, composed and performed by Serge Gainsbourg in duet with his daughter Charlotte Gainsbourg. Recorded in 1984, the song was released as a single from Gainsbourg's album Love on the Beat in 1985. It is also available on Charlotte's 1986 album Charlotte for Ever. It was controversial because of its theme, but nevertheless successful, reaching number 2 in the French charts.
The title is a play on words in French in the chorus between "Un zeste de citron" ("A lemon zest") and "Inceste de citron" ("lemon incest").
The music is based on Étude Op. 10, No. 3 in E major by Frédéric Chopin.
The verses sung by Charlotte "are quickly short of breath and lack to give a relief to the singing which is beautiful nevertheless". Gainsbourg sings with "a repetitive phrasing which takes some liberties with the melody". The background vocals are sung by The Simms Brothers Band.
The music video shows Gainsbourg, shirtless and in jeans, and Charlotte, wearing a shirt and knickers, lying on a bed.
This song has caused a scandal as it was accused of glamorising paedophilia and incest. Charlotte, who then was thirteen, sings ambiguous lyrics seeming to refer to an impossible physical love between an adult and his child. In addition, the relationship between the two singers is the same as the protagonists of the song, which led to suspicions on the autobiographical nature of the work. Serge Gainsbourg denied these allegations in the media. In an interview in 2010, Charlotte defended her decision to record the track, though acknowledging it was a "provocation".
The single went straight to #7 on October 26, 1985. It climbed to #6 for two weeks, then reached #2 and stayed there for four consecutive weeks, being unable to dislodge the successive two number-one hits Century's "Lover Why" and Jean-Jacques Goldman and Michael Jones' "Je te donne". Then it kept on dropping on the chart and totalled ten weeks in the top ten and 18 in the top 50.