- Source: Bon Bon Vie (Gimme the Good Life)
"bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie (Gimme the Good Life)" is a single by American band T. S. Monk, released in August 1980 on Mirage Records. It was arranged by band leader Thelonious Monk, Jr. and written by songwriter Lawrence Russell Brown and producer Sandy Linzer. The song has a rhythmic style and lyrics about aspiring to a rich lifestyle.
The song was released in promotion of the band's 1980 debut album House of Music. It was T. S. Monk's best-selling song and only charting single on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 63. "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie", particularly its horn intro, has been sampled by several hip hop artists.
Music and lyrics
According to Barry Lederer from Billboard, "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" is a midtempo funk/jazz song with a brassy beat. It has also been defined as a record of post-disco. T. S. Monk's bandleader Thelonious Monk, Jr., served as arranger, drummer, and lead vocalist for the song. It was co-written by Sandy Linzer, who produced its album House of Music. The song's lyrics are about aspiring to a rich lifestyle. Its chorus chants, "Give us the bon" target="_blank">bon / give us the bon" target="_blank">bon bon" target="_blank">bon bon" target="_blank">bon bon" target="_blank">bon vie / give us the good life."
The song opens with a notable horn intro. The song's rough rhythmic style counterpoints its smooth harmonies. It also features lighthearted vocals, haunting scat riffs, and a backbeat constituted by brass, bongo, and hand-clapping.
Release and reception
After "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" was released, it charted at number 63 on the Billboard Hot 100 on March 28, 1981. It also reached number 11 on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles. On the Hot Dance/Disco Songs, the song peaked at number 13. It proved to be T. S. Monk's only entry on both the pop and dance charts, as well as their best-selling song. In the United Kingdom, "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" reached number 63 and spent two weeks on the UK Singles Chart. It also charted at number 21 in the Netherlands.
In a review of House of Music, Stereo Review magazine's Irv Cohn said "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" is an "interesting" song that proves "real musicians are at work in dance music in the post-disco era." The Black Music & Jazz Review was not impressed by the album, but enjoyed the single and its B-side "a lot", as well as T. S. Monk's subsequent single "Candidate for Love". Stephen Holden from The New York Times wrote that producer Sandy Linzer "has found for T.S. Monk a flexible, melodic style that is halfway between Chic's disco and Dr. Buzzard's swing." In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau praised "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" as "a rich song about aspiring to the rich life" and wrote, "I love not only the subtle Sandy Linzer lyric but also Thelonious Monk Jr.'s rough, high-humored vocal and incisive drumming, and its arrangement keeps giving up new pleasures." He also took note of its musical aesthetic, calling it "ebullient on top and this far from desperation underneath". Christgau named it the second-best song of the 1980s in a decade-end list for The Village Voice.
Legacy
According to Thelonious Monk biographist Robin Kelley, with the song's success, band members Thelonious Jr. and Boo Boo Monk "had finally fulfilled their father's elusive dream—to get a 'hit'". "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" was sampled by rapper Jaz-O for his 1989 song "Pumpin'", featuring Jay-Z. The song's horn intro was sampled by hip hop group Public Enemy for the song "Welcome to the Terrordome" from their album Fear of a Black Planet. The horn intro was also sampled by Above the Law on their 1993 song "G's & Macoronies", by R&B group Blackstreet on their 1994 song "Good Life", and by rapper Raekwon on his 2009 song "Stick Up Music". "bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie" was remixed by Paul Simpson in 2010.
Track listing
Personnel
Credits adapted from House of Music liner notes.
Cliff Anderson – horns
Russell Blake – bass
Lawrence Russell Brown – composer
Floyd Fisher – keyboards, synthesiser
Yvonne Fletcher – vocals
Sandy Linzer – composer, producer
Boo Boo Monk – vocals
Thelonious Monk, Jr. – arrangements, drums, horns, vocals
Jeff Sigman – guitar
Ronnie Taylor – horns
Courtney Wynter – horns
Victor See Yuen – percussion
Charts
See also
List of post-disco artists and songs
References
External links
"bon" target="_blank">Bon bon" target="_blank">Bon Vie (Gimme the Good Life)" at Discogs (list of releases)
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- Pertunjukan Beyond Live
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- T. S. Monk
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- ITunes LP
- Like a Version