Haitian singer/songwriter working on a new video that will be out in June, her 14-song CD, “Unexpected,” came out in late 2014 and she’s working on her next release. Multi-lingual, she participated in an international competition that resulted in a single with American artist T-Pain. She has collaborated with various arrangers from locations ranging from St. Lucia to Puerto Rico, Tanzania, the United States, and, of course, Haiti, and also published a book of poems in French and plans on writing again.
“I still think that I’m doing urban music, in general, … and I like to mix different genres… and I found a studio producer… who really matched with my artistic point of view and we came up with something that I think is really interesting.”
“English is becoming, it’s like a worldwide language right now, so, it’s good for me, but I used to do it without thinking about the commercial point of view.”
“Spanish came up because I had a lot of Spanish fans and I wanted to give them something on the album that they can relate to.”
“My dad is a saxophone player and I never liked his job because he’s always out, he’s never home, he’s always touring, so he usually comes home very late or doesn’t come home for six months, so, I never liked it, so I never had the idea that I would be doing this.”
“I was writing just for the sake of writing, because, I used to write poems.”
“I’m glad I (had) this opportunity. It’s good to hear my voice on the same track as (T-Pain’s). It’s a great opportunity for me and this has opened a lot of doors for me.”
“I create the songs for the public and it’s good to see that they are interested in what I make and how I make it. That’s a pleasure. That’s a blessing. When they like it that means the world to me because… I’m doing this for them, so it’s good to know they like that.”
“I think it’s good to feed your public. It’s good to always have something to offer… collaborations and other projects… I think it’s good for the public to see new stuff, that you have new songs coming up, photo shoots, whatever it is, it’s good to stay connected with your public and always have something to show them that they can stay tuned and look for what you have coming up next.”
“Even if I’m not doing an actual album, when an artist – international or local – asks me for collaboration I still do it and even if it’s not about an album coming out I can still do it as a single. I’m open for business, as they say.”
"They Say"
"Fame"