Don't miss Marie-Flore's concert on December 10, 2025 at 8pm at Victoire 2!
At once rough and sophisticated, with a piquant sense of humor, often against the grain, or at any rate anchored in her time, Marie-Flore, author, composer, performer, multi-instrumentalist, manipulates a straightforward, immediate pop, more sensual than ever. Allergic to idolatry, rich in the eclectic influences that have marked her career: The Velvet Underground, whose venomous themes she cultivates, Leonard Cohen, her ultimate reference in terms of poetry, Gainsbourg's sensual wordplay and Christophe, a benevolent mentor with whom she shares the same exacting standards, she loves to let herself be carried away by large-scale pop songs, Dua Lipa-style.
Here she is again, in 2024, with an explosive single that conjures up inspirations from across the Atlantic, thanks to a violin gimmick signed Marie-Flore that sounds like it came straight out of a New York hip-hop production from the 2000s. On the menu: punchlines chanted like uppercuts, chiselled and poetic, all driven by a heady chorus that could well become the new anthem for all broken hearts!
The text is bound to evoke memories in those who, in the age of ghosting, will recognize themselves in this quest for answers. How do romantics cope in the age of modern, ghostly love? Marie-Flore seems to have found her remedy: Tout dire.
Her new album is scheduled for release in spring 2025.
At once rough and sophisticated, with a piquant sense of humor, often against the grain, or at any rate anchored in her time, Marie-Flore, author, composer, performer, multi-instrumentalist, manipulates a straightforward, immediate pop, more sensual than ever. Allergic to idolatry, rich in the eclectic influences that have marked her career: The Velvet Underground, whose venomous themes she cultivates, Leonard Cohen, her ultimate reference in terms of poetry, Gainsbourg's sensual wordplay and Christophe, a benevolent mentor with whom she shares the same exacting standards, she loves to let herself be carried away by large-scale pop songs, Dua Lipa-style.
Here she is again, in 2024, with an explosive single that conjures up inspirations from across the Atlantic, thanks to a violin gimmick signed Marie-Flore that sounds like it came straight out of a New York hip-hop production from the 2000s. On the menu: punchlines chanted like uppercuts, chiselled and poetic, all driven by a heady chorus that could well become the new anthem for all broken hearts!
The text is bound to evoke memories in those who, in the age of ghosting, will recognize themselves in this quest for answers. How do romantics cope in the age of modern, ghostly love? Marie-Flore seems to have found her remedy: Tout dire.
Her new album is scheduled for release in spring 2025.