Louise Féron (née Pascale Louise Féron) made a name for herself in 1988 with the song "Tomber sous le charme", written with Dominique Laboubée from the Rouen-based band Dogs, which enjoyed success beyond the indie rock sphere with which the singer was associated. The song, released on the Virgin label, was followed in 1989 by "Ni avec toi, ni sans toi" and a debut album released two years later, produced by John Cale (The Velvet Underground) and from which "L'Ivresse des profondeurs" and "Souvenirs de l'avenir" were taken as singles. Her guitar-dominated rock style is distinguished by her meticulous songwriting, which then only reaches a small circle of fans with the next two self-produced albums, Singulière et Plurielle (1997) and, after more than a decade, Le Passé Revenant (2009), which marks Louise Féron's return to a varied mode, with folk ballads.
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