[2] Inspired by classic Italian and French film music, Saint Privat has released three albums (Riviera, 2004; Superflu, 2006; Après la Bohème, 2023).
[7][8] Getting exhausted with the French capital, she relocated to Saint-Privat, a small hamlet in the southern region Occitania which was just becoming attractive for bohemians, artists, recovering drug users, and enterprising homemakers.
Novelist and screenwriter Ian McEwan became attracted to the picturesque village to relax, renovate an abandoned building, and work on Black Dogs[10] Sajdik has been a permanent resident of Saint Privat since 2002.
In a 2019 interview, Waldeck cites Romanian piano legend Eugen Cicero as an inspiration for the compositions, who had made musical crossover popular with his 1965 release of Rokoko Jazz.
Many tracks keenly refer to guitar work Antônio Carlos Jobim had developed for Bossa nova[11] while others boast classical genes ("Bach en dub"; "September Song" by Kurt Weill).