THE MOST OVERLOOKED DETAILS IN THE FRENCH CONNECTION’S OFFICIAL SINGLES GUIDE
You bought the book. You flipped through the glossy photos of Brive-la-Gaillarde’s medieval streets, read the track-by-track breakdown of *All Singles*, and maybe even bookmarked the café recommendations. But if you think you’ve squeezed every drop of value from *The French Connection Retrospective: Official Guide to Hello, Brive-la-Gaillarde, and All Singles*, you’re wrong. The real gold isn’t in the obvious—it’s in the margins, the footnotes, and the things the guide *almost* left out. Here’s what you missed, why it matters, and how it stacks up against the only real alternative: the fan-compiled *Brive Unlocked* PDF.
PAPER QUALITY VS. PORTABILITY: WHY THE GUIDE’S PHYSICAL FORM IS A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD
The the french connection hello Connection’s guide is a brick. Weighing in at 1.2 kg with a hardcover spine that cracks if you open it past 90 degrees, it’s built to last—but not to travel. The paper is thick, matte, and fingerprint-resistant, which is great if you’re displaying it on a coffee table. It’s terrible if you’re trying to shove it into a backpack for a day trip to Collonges-la-Rouge. The binding is Smyth-sewn, meaning it won’t fall apart after a year, but it also won’t lay flat unless you break the spine.
*Brive Unlocked* is a 40-page PDF you can email to your phone in 30 seconds. It’s lightweight, searchable, and fits in your pocket. The trade-off? The photos are compressed to hell, and the text is a single column of 10-point Arial. If you’re the type who dog-ears pages and scribbles notes in the margins, the PDF is useless. But if you’re the type who loses paper guides in hostel common rooms, it’s a lifesaver.
Verdict: The official guide wins for collectors and armchair travelers. *Brive Unlocked* wins for backpackers and last-minute planners.
THE MISSING VENUES: WHERE THE GUIDE CUTS CORNERS ON BRIVE’S MUSIC SCENE
The French Connection’s guide lists three venues where the band played in Brive: Le Palace, L’Usine, and a “mysterious warehouse near the train station.” That’s it. It skips Le Bateau Ivre, the dive bar where the band’s bassist allegedly punched a heckler in 1998. It ignores La Scène, the venue that hosted their final Brive show in 2001, now a parking lot. And it doesn’t mention the impromptu acoustic set they played at Café des Arts in 1995, which was recorded on a bootleg cassette that still circulates among collectors.
*Brive Unlocked* includes all of these. It even has a map with pins for each location, including the warehouse (which is now a Lidl). The PDF also lists current venues that book French Connection tribute bands, like Le 360 and La Nef, with contact info for booking agents. The official guide acts like the band’s Brive history ended in 2001. *Brive Unlocked* treats it as a living thing.
Verdict: If you care about the band’s legacy beyond the official narrative, *Brive Unlocked* is the only choice.
THE SINGLES BREAKDOWN: WHAT THE GUIDE GETS RIGHT (AND WHAT IT FLAT-OUT IGNORES)
The guide’s track-by-track analysis of *All Singles* is thorough—too thorough, in some cases. It spends three pages dissecting the drum fills on “Hello, Brive-la-Gaillarde” but skips the B-sides entirely. No mention of “Rue du Temps Perdu,” the non-album single from 1997 that fans consider the band’s hidden masterpiece. No deep dive into “Les Ombres de Collonges,” the B-side to “Ville Fantôme” that was recorded in a single take at 3 AM. The guide treats *All Singles* like a closed canon, when in reality, the B-sides are where the band’s raw energy lives.
*Brive Unlocked* includes a full discography, including the B-sides, with liner notes from the band’s former sound engineer. It also has a section on rare vinyl pressings, like the misprinted “Hello, Brive-la-Gaillarde” 7-inch where the A-side plays at 45 RPM and the B-side at 33. The official guide doesn’t even acknowledge that vinyl exists.
Verdict: The guide is better for casual fans who want a polished overview. *Brive Unlocked* is for obsessives who need the unfiltered story.
THE MAPS: PRETTY VS. USABLE
The French Connection’s guide includes a fold-out map of Brive-la-Gaillarde with the band’s key locations marked in gold foil. It’s gorgeous. It’s also useless. The map is oriented north-up, which is fine if you’re holding it at a desk, but terrible if you’re walking down Rue Majour and trying to figure out which way to turn. The street names are in a tiny serif font that’s impossible to read in dim light. And the map doesn’t include public transit stops, so if you’re trying to take the bus from the train station to Le Palace, you’re out of luck.
*Brive Unlocked*’s map is a black-and-white schematic with clear labels, transit stops, and walking times between locations. It’s not pretty, but it’s functional. The PDF also includes a separate map for Collonges-la-Rouge, the nearby village where the band filmed the music video for “Ville Fantôme.” The official guide only mentions Collonges in passing.
Verdict: The guide’s map is a conversation piece. *Brive Unlocked*’s map is a tool.
THE INTERVIEWS: CURATED VS. UNFILTERED
The French Connection’s guide includes excerpts from interviews with the band’s members, but they’re heavily edited. The quotes are polished, the controversies are glossed over, and the whole thing reads like a press release. There’s no mention of the feud between the guitarist and the drummer, which led to the band’s breakup in 2002. No discussion of the canceled 1999 tour, which left fans stranded at the train station. The guide presents the band’s history as a smooth, conflict-free arc.
*Brive Unlocked* includes full
