Juliette Noureddine, born in Paris on September 25, 1962, began her career well before the release of the hit album Assassins Sans Couteaux, which brought her to public attention in 1998. No fewer than six albums, half of them recorded live, had already been released since her debut in 1987. Despite her late recognition, Juliette was awarded the insignia of the Order of Merit (2008) and Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres (2011), followed by the Légion d'Honneur (2013). These prestigious awards crown a faultless career in which the quality of her compositions counts as much as the earthy lyrics she fills her songs with. Released in 2004, after the album Le Festin de Juliette (2002), the compilation Ma Vie, Mon Oeuvre (Vol. 1 ) gives an overview of the first twenty years of her career, in the tradition of the greatest poets of French chanson. Gouaille, humor and verve are at the heart of a repertoire that expands with the albums Mutatis Mutandis (2005), Bijoux et Babioles (2008), No Parano (2011), Nour (2013) and the conceptual Les Indiens Sont à l'Ouest (2015), between tradition and modernity. A new fourteen-CD set, including a rarities CD, appeared in 2016, before the release of J'Aime Pas la Chanson (2018).
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