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i kept hearing the instrumental of alors on danse in south america whenever that song came out. and yeah he is massive in france. i like his songs when i hear them, that video for formidable was good too, apparently lots of ppl actually thought they'd seen stromae ambling drunk in bruxelles and felt bad for him
― Jibe, Thursday, 19 June 2014 09:12 (nine years ago) link
i really liked "alors on danse" but haven't heard anything else from him. i remember hearing the instrumental for "alors on danse" with the vocals from "stereo love" played over it one night when i was out, which... otm
― dyl, Thursday, 19 June 2014 16:14 (nine years ago) link
one month passes...
Oh cool this guy has a thread, I've been playing his stuff a fair bit this summer esp 'formidable'. Don't remember hearing him before then but I am only ever just barely in any kind of loop.
― wins, Sunday, 3 August 2014 08:43 (nine years ago) link
seven months pass...
two years pass...
I love really Stromae, it's incredible, original ! He belongs to a new generation of african-european artists which mix poetry, chanson, hip-hop, dance, african vibes, it's really beautiful. His success in America is a good thing.
In France, we have singers like Maitre Gims (master of flow, with dark glasses), very popular in France and Italy. More and more confidential, we have Jann Halexander, french-gabonese singer (style Cabaret), more famous in France and Belgium.
We have a lot of young artists which prove that (afro) european music is strong, very creative, very interesting.
For Stromae, you can discover a lot of fan remix on internet, from the entire world.
― Bruno, Monday, 21 August 2017 21:06 (six years ago) link
four years pass...
https://www.tf1.fr/tf1/jt-we/videos/javais-besoin-de-vivre-des-choses-stromae-invite-du-20h-de-tf1-pour-son-retour-06256570.html
On Sunday night, Stromae—a Belgian-Rwandan singer and rapper who put his career on hiatus in 2015 but is now making a comeback that has long been anticipated across the French-speaking world—appeared on TF1, the most-watched network in France, for an interview. Stromae, whose real name is Paul Van Haver (his stage name is a slangy inversion of the word Maestro), sat in a suit and tie across a desk from the journalist Anne-Claire Coudray, who asked him about his forthcoming album, his global influences, and the process of losing and refinding his desire to make music. “I think I simply needed to live,” Stromae replied.
Then, four or so minutes in, Coudray asked Stromae about his struggles with his mental health, and the interview suddenly ceased to be an interview—music swelled, and Stromae started to sing his new song “L’Enfer” (meaning “Hell”). He initially looked at Coudray, as if responding conversationally to her question, but midway through the third line of the song—“If I counted all the people like me, there’d be a lot”—he turned to look into the camera, which started gently to pan around him as the studio lighting subtly changed. In the chorus, Stromae attested to having had suicidal thoughts, his gaze momentarily flickering away as he sang that he was not very proud of them; as he hit the title word—enfer—the music swelled with pulsing backing vocals. He ran through another couple of verses and choruses, still seated at the interview desk, his face at once still and perfectly expressive. As he finished, he turned to Coudray, who thanked him for “this beautiful gift,” and for his “sincerity.” Still, the TF1 interview felt particularly intimate in its melding of journalistic and artistic forms; a top editor at TF1 admitted afterward that it was precisely Stromae’s intention to “break the codes” of TV news. Some media critics felt that the episode set a troubling precedent, pushing factual journalism farther down the road to “infotainment.” In an article headlined, “Mesdames et messieurs, bonsoir le storytelling,” Olivier Lamm, a culture journalist at Libération, said that his paper had decided not to play along with Stromae’s efforts to promote his new work, and that TF1 had crossed a “red line” and allowed themselves to be used for commercial purposes. Writing for L’Obs, the magazine formerly known as Le Nouvel Observateur, Sophie Delassein and Arnaud Gonzague agreed that TF1 had obliterated the line between “the necessarily distanced perspective” of journalism and “the imperatives of show business,” and accused Coudray of vindicating those across the Western world who view the media as “rotten” and “complicit.” The suicide under discussion here, they added, is “journalistic.”