Born and raised in Brittany, France, Yelle is known for her spirited,  explicit lyrics, laid over a booty-shaking pop electro beat. This  musical prowess was expertly showcased in 2005 with the track "Je Veux  Te Voir" ("I Wanna See You"). The minute this humorous track (taking a  friendly jab at French rapper Cuizinier) was placed on her MySpace page  (www.myspace.com/iloveyelle), it garnered 2000 plays in just two days.
Yelle grew up with music, her dad being a famous musician in the Côtes  d'Armor region, where she still lives today. She played the piano, then  went on to acting, and played in a few bands that never made it past the  rehearsals, but whatever: she knew she was a born performer.Five years ago, she met GrandMarnier at a party. This young musician and producer, was going back and forth between his own band and his dorm room where he was making beats on his computer. Although his teens were all about rock music, he was drawn to electronic music after listening to the Beastie Boys and started mucking around with his machines. Yelle started singing on GrandMarnier's demos just for a laugh at first, but the combination of the boy's electronic loops and the girl's half-sung half-rapped voice worked so well that they naturally ended up producing an electro pop album all in French if you please. Yelle's golden voice was in the house!
Last autumn, for her first show, Yelle, bold and audacious, was invited  to Paris Paris, one of Paris' trendiest venues, packed on the occasion  and waiting to hear the young provincial's crazy lyrics and off the hook  loops. The set, very rock and in-your-face, was a success as the crowd  all joined in to sing the lyrics to "Je veux te voir…." ("I wanna see  you") becoming in just a few months a cult hit on dance floors from  Paris to London and New York… Now very much at ease on stage with her fluorescent tights, the brunette  with attitude drops her first album, which echoes a certain nostalgia  for the golden years of French electro-pop (Etienne Daho, Elli &  Jacno, Alain Chamford, Taxi Girl or Lio) but all boosted with her own  flavored groove and subtle vibe into some booty-pop, revealing the story  of a shameless girl with a strong character.
So "85A" (a French breast measurement), very close to the tune of  "Banana Split" is dedicated to small breasts (Pamela would never have  given me self confidence on that side. Thankfully Jane Birkin was a  classier woman).  "Les Femmes" ("Women") slyly talks about lesbian temptation, while "Mon  Meilleur Ami" ("My Best Friend") and its bouncy keyboards is an ode to  dildos (you are all so small, my best friend, I take you with me  everywhere I go. I talk to you like you are a sweet and sensitive man;  the only thing that annoys me about you is I have to change your  batteries). Yelle has broken away from feminine insecurity, no more  nostalgia! (I sing in 80s French, I don't look back to the past, but  there were still good times back then" she sings in "Amour Du Sol"  literally "Love Of The Soil"). Yelle is a liberated woman and speaks  freely, whether it be about sex, jogging, boys who drive her crazy or  her best friend. Yelle, winks at boys like a playful brat, but still  casts a very cynical eye to the world surrounding her.
Yelle may be young and pretty but she is also a very explosive character  entering a slightly  rigid French pop scene. This stage freak with a  unique flow is fully driving the new non-aggressive girl power scene,  focusing on delivering kick-ass lyrics. She also doesn't take herself  seriously and is refreshingly laidback, especially when she proudly  covers the song "A Cause Des Garcons" ("What We Do For Boys") a French  ‘80s anthem. Let's all sing along to the lyrics: (What we do for boys,  we wear stockings, we fight each other, boys make us worry, we cry all  the time, that's what we do for boys").
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