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Eden: vividly captures the mood of mid-90s dancefloors.
Eden: vividly captures the mood of mid-90s dancefloors.
Eden: vividly captures the mood of mid-90s dancefloors.

Spotlight on... the French touch

This article is more than 8 years old
French DJs added their distinctive je ne sais quoi to mid-90s house music... these scenes from Parisian clubland are evoked in a new film, Eden

What is the French touch?
It’s the term coined by the journalist Martin James in a 1996 Melody Maker column for the distinctive spin that French producers and DJs put on house music in the mid-90s – identifiable characteristics include disco samples, robotic vocals and heavy filter and phaser effects. Stardust’s 1998 earworm Music Sounds Better With You, co-produced by Thomas Bangalter of Daft Punk, is a good example of what we’re talking about here.

The film team review Eden Guardian

But that was nearly 20 years ago. Why is it relevant now?
The scene is vividly recalled in a new film by the director Mia Hansen-Løve called Eden, which follows an aspiring DJ and his friends from the early days of French house up to the (somewhat less heady) present. It’s not often that a good – and realistic – screen portrayal of club culture comes along and, despite its meandering plot, Eden captures the mood of the dancefloor better than 99% of other films about clubbing. (Take a look at the trailer for the forthcoming Zac Efron film We Are Your Friends for an example of how not to do it.)

Director Mia Hansen-Løve at work on Eden: her teenage clubbing days fed into the screenplay she co-wrote with her brother.

Is it an insider view?
Very much so. Hansen-Løve’s teenage clubbing experiences fed into the film and she co-wrote the screenplay with her older brother, Sven, a house DJ and promoter in Paris in the 90s who, like the protagonist Paul, was part of a short-lived DJ duo called Cheers. Many of the other characters are drawn from real life, including the two members of Daft Punk (portrayed here by actors) who agreed to let Hansen-Løve license four of their tracks for the lowest possible fee.

You got Da Funk: four of Daft Punk’s mixes feature in Eden.

Standout musical moment?
The euphoric Derrick May mix of Sueño Latino that opens the film. Also memorable is the scene where Daft Punk nervously try out Da Funk at a house party. It became their breakout track.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • French touch – 10 of the best

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  • Franz Ferdinand: Always Ascending review – feel the Caledonian funk

  • Raves, robots and writhing bodies: how electronic music rewired the world

  • French music now: the boom in electro pop

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