In fact, Brel had quite a history at Knokke, where he even made a live recording, in 1971. (The album you can buy now also has an interview that he gave while at Knokke that year.) Knokke's Casino represented for a Belgian singer like Brel the pinnacle of success, glamorous like Las Vegas was for Frank Sinatra. In his wonderful song La Chanson de Jacky, about the folly of his youth, singing at Knokke is shown in another light:
Même si un jour à Knokke-le-Zoute
Je deviens comme je le redoute
Chanteur pour femmes finissantes
Que je leur chante "Mi Corazon"
Avec la voix bandonéante
D'un Argentin de Carcassonne.
Even if one day at Knokke-le-Zoute
I become as I fear
A singer for old ladies,
Singing "Mi Corazon" to them
With the smarmy voice [voice like a Bandoneón; thanks, Jens!—CTD]
Of an Argentinian from Carcassonne
Jacques Brel, Live at Knokke-Le-Zoute (1971) |
The building's cost is forecast as 125 million € (US$154.55 million). According to the article I read, the new building will consist of three parts, the renovated version of the original Casino (with the Magritte and other artwork preserved, of course), with its glass façade restored; a 108-meter (354.3-foot) tower meant to look like two large sails, and a porous bridge between them. If the architect's name is not familiar, his most famous building to date, I think, is Kiasma, the contemporary art museum in Helsinki.
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