Paris Match: Jain

Limiñanas in Rock en Seine: “Our concerts are very fragile numbers”

Real favorite of the first day of Rock in Seine, Limiñanas signed a concert of a beautiful energy with a lot of warmth and commitment. We took the opportunity to meet Lionel and Marie, the leaders of this unique formation. History to understand also how this couple and its musicians have become the French rock band the most seen of the moment.

This concert was a bit of consolation for rock fans frustrated by the programming of the first day of Rock en Seine. In the particular context of a park of St. Cloud half empty –  see our article on the battle of Paris festivals  – those who did not give in to the temptation to go see the phenomenon Die Antwoord at the same time on the big scene, have not regretted it.

Hot riffs, a psychedelic phosphorescent guitar, a trance rhythm, a man of old-fashioned elegance who dances alone in the background, an incandescent recovery of “Gloria”: here are some ingredients of the recipe for a good concert of Limiñanas .

Emmanuelle Seigner even made a surprise appearance at the time of the title “Shadow People” she sings on their last album. The invitations of this kind are at the heart of the project of the group as we explained Lionel and Marie a little earlier in the afternoon.

Your latest album ” Shadow people” offers great collaborations with other musicians (Emmanuelle Seigner, Anton Newcombe, Bertrand Belin, Peter Hook). How important are encounters in your career and how you make music? 
Lionel:Our group comes from a meeting, the one with Pascal Comelade who participated in our first two albums. He had originally invited me to record guitars on a record (“A Freak Serenade”). I was expecting to play with a band but he was alone with the sound engineer. I had found it amazing to record my guitar parts because I came from an ultra-codified garage rock environment, used to playing in a group. It really opened my mind. I thought it was a way to get around the problem of groups breaking their mouths because of one or the other who can not or does not want to play anymore. It’s a way to control the process from A to Z.

You have experienced many musical experiences before the success of Limiñanas. How to explain that this training, based around a couple, worked? 
It is precisely because we have given up the democratic process of the classical group. We decided to make the music that we wanted to really produce, both, as we want, and at our own pace. We are big bosses (laughs). We love to rehearse and spend a lot of time in the studio at home. 

When you are working on your new songs at home near Perpignan, are you the type to tie everything up or do you leave a little freedom for the invited musicians?
There is always a bit of frustration to leave air in the music but we have to do it. When we worked for the first time with Peter Hook (bass player New Order), we made music by mail by sending recorded tracks. Marie had encouraged me to send very simple and sober versions to give her room to intervene. And it worked: he made several bass tracks, lots of choirs, and in the end much more work than originally thought! 



Anton Newcombe’s Brian Jonestown Massacre who produced your latest album came into contact with you through Twitter before working with you. At the beginning, you have been spotted by American labels via MySpace … It’s a must, the social networks, for the success of a group today?
I think what’s really important is first and foremost things. We can then share them. If we can give advice to a young group, it is first that he does not care that it works. You have to make music for yourself first, be proud of what you do and make no concessions. At first we were criticized because we liked both New Wave English and Cramps, which was inconceivable for the purists of the time. You do not have to listen to anyone and first make your own music. Social networks can then become an important ally. But we, we are a little morons in the matter (laughs). The tweet of Anton Newcombe, it is a friend journalist of the World who told us about it, we had not even seen it!

A little “battery” question for Marie: why do not you use a hi-hat or a cymbal on stage? 
Marie : It’s only for sound, to make room for all the little instruments that are there. In our group, the tambourine is very important. If we put cymbals we do not hear anything! Neither the tambourine nor the little pianos. And then it also allows to stay in a sort of tribal trance throughout the set. 

How do you work your texts? Your themes are very broad. You are able to make a song on a fuzz effect pedal for or on a simple cooking recipe …
Lionel: For the cooking recipe, we did not invent anything, it is the recipe of Migas of my Grandma. I advise you to find the 45! If you apply the words to the letter, you will have your lunch. Because it’s not something to eat at night, it’s too heavy (laughs). It’s fried semolina in Spanish sausage fat! Texts are what asks us the most work. The choice to write in French does not make things easier. We can be ridiculous when it is badly written. I sign most of the texts, my older brother Serge also offers them from time to time … And then there is Bertrand Belin, who wrote “Dimanche” on our last album that I really like. He is an author who has a unique way of telling stories.

During this tour, you play in all kinds of venues and big festivals this summer like here in Rock en Seine. How do you adapt to these different atmospheres? 
We worked a lot on the setlist, which we simply adapt according to the duration we are given. Our concerts are very fragile numbers because very electric and we are seven on stage. It’s repetitive music based on riffs played sometimes in loops and if one of us at a galley on stage, it compromises everything! We are really grateful to our friends who have been with us for a very long time. They followed us into our galleys when the group did not interest anyone. It’s really cool for all of us to have this recognition from the public today.

Source: Limiñanas in Rock en Seine: “Our concerts are very fragile numbers”

Ich will die Leute nicht belehren – Jain im Interview – MusikBlog

Jeanne Louise Galice, besser bekannt als Jain, verbrachte den Großteil ihrer Jugend im Ausland, da ihr Vater in der Ölindustrie arbeitete und deshalb oft

[TRANSLATED] Jeanne Louise Galice, better known as Jain , spent most of her youth abroad, as her father worked in the oil industry and therefore had to move often. In November 2015, the French singer released her debut album “Zanaka”, which means “child” in Malagasy and is a homage to her mother, of French-Malagasy origin.

Three years after the first work, his successor is now published with ” Souldier “. Recorded in Paris and produced by Maxim Nucci, various influences also appear on the upcoming record. Why the different rhythms are as important as the music helps her through difficult times and why she is skeptical of social media, told us the 26-year-old singer in the MusikBlog interview.

MusikBlog: Most of your youth has been spent exploring new cultures. How did time remain for the music during the whole processions?

Jeanne Louise: I have always been a big fan of music. Already at the age of 4-5 I started to listen to music, then to play the drums at the age of 6 and in general there was a lot of time dedicated to music in my family and in my circle of friends.

In the time that you speak about, music has taken on a completely different role for me. I had a hard time finding myself, discovering myself as a new person. By moving from country to country, I had to leave my friends behind and make new friends every time. I had to change my home again and again. Although it was a great time from the outside, it was hard for me.

MusikBlog: And the music helped?

Jeanne Louise: Exactly. I needed something that followed me at every turn. In the music I found my constant, a place where I could always feel secure. I could feel at home anytime, anywhere, I just had to make music. Continue reading “Ich will die Leute nicht belehren – Jain im Interview – MusikBlog”

The Limiñanas – “Angels & Devils”, “The Gift” – live session

The Limiñanas bring a little Catalan sun on the Malouine coasts. Between French chanson and influences underground garage, The Limiñanas deploys in each of its titles a very cinematographic universe, of the road movie with the echoes of Cinecittà. Captured during this exclusive session near Saint-Malo, between land and sea, our southern rockers perform “Angels and Devils” and “The Gift” and we put a little balm in the heart.

En français

Les Limiñanas apportent un peu de soleil catalan sur les côtes malouines. Entre chanson française et influences garage underground, The Limiñanas déploie dans chacun de ses titres un univers très cinématographique, du road-movie aux échos de Cinecittà. Captés lors de cette session exclusive près de Saint-Malo, entre terre et mer, nos rockeurs du sud interprètent “Angels and Devils” et “The Gift” et nous mettent un peu de baume au cœur.

 

Jain releases “Souldier”, her second pop world album

She swapped her black dress with Peter Pan collar blue worker combination, but his pop-world hits continue to conquer the world: Jain released Friday his second album “Souldier” for which she feels “still a lot of pressure”.

For artists who hit hard in the first opus, the second is usually the one of all dangers: less pleasing, less surprising, less sell … Dangers necessarily proportional to the high expectations of the record company, the media, the public.

Jain , whose meteoric trajectory has come close to the stars of international pop in just two years, with the hits “Come” and “Makeba” from the album “Zanaka” (2015), is aware of this.

“I see the wait in the eyes of people, that’s why having resumed the concerts this summer was good for me, it gave me some certainty for some new live titles,” admits Jain. , Jeanne Galice in the civil.

For artists who hit hard in the first opus, the second is usually the one of all dangers: less pleasing, less surprising, less sell … Dangers necessarily proportional to the high expectations of the record company, the media, the public.

Jain , whose meteoric trajectory has come close to the stars of international pop in just two years, with the hits “Come” and “Makeba” from the album “Zanaka” (2015), is aware of this [ . . . ]

Read Full Story at: Jain releases “Souldier”, his second pop world album