The tangled legacy of Jacques Brel
He was the most popular French language singer ever, but an auction of his papers has exposed the acrimony left behind after his death
The 30th anniversary of the death of the greatest popular singer in the French language has generated an avalanche of tributes this week and an unseemly legal row. Sotheby's Paris will today auction 94 objects which once belonged to the Belgian singer, song-writer and actor Jacques Brel, including a fountain pen, pipe, and manuscripts of his best-known songs.
The hand-written texts of classic Brel numbers, such as "Amsterdam" and "Mathilde", have been on display since Saturday at Sotheby's Paris auction house. The lyrics, scribbled in school exercise books, are jumbled with fascinating, corrections and second thoughts by Brel.

