[1] She spent part of her childhood and adolescence in Gatineau, in Paris, and in Washington, D.C.[2] In 2014, her first album Not So Deep as a Well set poems by Dorothy Parker to music.
[1][3] Two other poems by Parker were also set to music and released in 2015: “Bric-à-brac” and “The Small Hours”.
Songs of Love, Lost and Found and largely oriented around her contemporary interpretations of popular Canadian music.
[5][6] It notably includes “Au cœur de ma délire”, a traditional song first popularized by Dominique Tremblay and Philippe Gagnon, two members of Robert Charlebois’s touring entourage .
[5] It also includes a version of “Par un dimanche au soir”,[6] and “Le tueur de femmes”.