Clémence Lhomme

Born on February 25, 1965 in Suresnes, near Paris, Clémence Lhomme, daughter of film director Pierre Lhomme, began to make a name for herself with her crystalline voice in 1987. That year, she scored a hit with Blues Trottoir's "Un soir de pluie". After their separation, Clémence Lhomme quickly turned to a solo career, releasing her debut album of the same name in 1994, which earned her a nomination at the Victoires de la Musique awards. On this album, she adapted a Quincy Jones song and teamed up with Art Mengo and Louis Bertignac. Thanks to her collaboration with Bertignac, Clémence Lhomme reinvented herself in a much more pop register, making it into the charts thanks to an effective chorus, an unbridled solo by the former Téléphone guitarist and, above all, his mischievous, delicate voice. Thus launched into orbit, Clémence Lhomme's first solo LP was a great success. It was not until four years later that she returned with Ex-Immortelle, featuring Pascal Obispo as well as Art Mengo. The following year, in 1999, she composed the track "Je t'emmène où je t'aime" for the debut album by former Charts singer Calogero. In 2008, Clémence Lhomme began composing again with Japanese composer Yamori Kota, who produced a refined arrangement of the singer's biggest hit, "Un soir de pluie".

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