We shouldn't be scared of love.

You may hear from my fabulous accent that I'm French!

My music would be very, very different if I haven't traveled.

I'm someone who is quite shy, and onstage I'm quite... extrovert.

I started to write my songs when I was 15 and living in the Congo.

I just wanna write about what I am living as a citizen. That's all.

I could never imagine ever in my life that I'd be on the side of The Louvre.

I realised that I really liked to be on stage, and that I wanted to pursue it.

Well, the thing is I always listened to American music way more than French music.

Since I was a child, I was yearning to learn about percussion because that's what I loved.

I'm from the Southwest, and in the Southwest of France, you're not supposed to love Paris.

My favourite place was in The Congo. It's where I began to write songs and build myself as an adult.

When I was very young, I just loved the idea of tapping on stuff, so I was always making a lot of noise.

What I want to tell people is that you can mix the culture a little bit and it's not always appropriation.

Music is like my secret garden. It's where I heal myself from every pain that I feel. It's like a therapy.

Cultural appropriation is a big problem, but the thing is, I didn't invent my life. I really lived in Africa.

My music was about travelling a lot and connecting with other people, and English is the voice of travelling.

I quietly work with my computer on the tour bus, and then I wait to make my more natural rhythms when I get home.

For me to have the opportunity to learn the darbuka and the tabla in Dubai, it created my own thoughts for music.

I want to have Congolese influences but also influences from Dubai and Abu Dhabi and France. To mix everything up.

When I was nine, I was passing by a drum class and saw them playing and I was moved. That's why I started making music.

I grew up in a family where, when we listened to music everybody would dance, so for me that's a very natural thing to do.

Music is open-minded and has always travelled, every country takes something from another, and that's what makes the richness of music.

My mother is half-French, half-Malagasy, so I've been listening to African music, like Malian and Congolese music, since I was a child.

Sometimes people stop me on the street and they say 'when are you going to make the next 'Zanaka' and it's what I really didn't want to do.

When I was little, I was listening to the Beatles, Bob Marley, Janis Joplin, and stuff. I had a big soul music culture, and not so much a French one.

I think it's hard when you're a woman because the music industry is way more masculine than feminine, so you have to make your own space and fight for it.

I just write about what makes me sad, and then when I write, I hear myself. It's like therapy, where I write something sad and then I make it happier or hopeful.

It's really important because it's how you present yourself to people, and for me it's an act of respect, you know? To get dressed for the people who came to the show.

Going to the U.A.E. for the first time was a real cultural shock. Everything was different. People didn't speak my language, it was all new, a huge change. But I loved it.

I was always playing with whatever I could get under my hands, making rhythm with it, which was natural for me, because my parents were listening to a lot of African music.

I thought it was beautiful to be able to forgive and give love and to fight only with flowers. So I created the idea of a 'Souldier,' which is like an army guy but fights for love.

Sometimes you meet people that try to explain to you your work, and how to write a song and how to sing it, and they explain that you are doing it the wrong way. And yeah, it's always super frustrating.

Moving from Dubai to the Congo was one of the best things that happened to me, it's a shock to be confronted by the contrast in wealth and culture, and it's hard, but I loved it and it influenced me a lot.

I'm from a little town from the south tip of France, to be able to play in Coachella and meet other artists from all over the world and to connect with people that I love from my hometown is something amazing.

At 16 I was living in the Congo, and, you know, it's your teenage time. I really wanted to find a way to express myself, so I started to write songs in the Congo, and I think that's why my music is quite open, with a lot of different influences.

I've been to India, Jordan, South Africa, Namibia, Senegal, Australia, Madagascar, Oman, The States, and a lot of countries in Europe, just to visit... I wanted to make music to connect all of these influences, and make a multicultural music with these experiences.

Moving to Dubai at age 9 and then the Congo, they were two completely opposite countries. But that brought me to music and taught me things that I never would have learned otherwise. And it was always about the rhythm in those two countries - that's why I love them.

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