Cœur de Pirate – Impossible à aimer (2021) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Cœur de Pirate – Impossible à aimer (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 33:52 minutes | 369 MB | Genre: Pop, Female Vocal
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Bravo musique

When Montreal singer-songwriter Béatrice Martin, aka Cœur de pirate, underwent vocal cord surgery in early 2021, she didn’t know if she’d ever be able to sing again. During her recovery, she recorded and released the instrumental album Perséides, which saw her lean hard on her trusty musical companion, the piano. Thankfully, Martin’s voice makes a healthy return on the follow-up, Impossible à aimer, and she uses it to make peace with a part of herself: “The title [which translates to ‘Impossible to Love’] is an allusion to the fact that, since I started out in the late 2000s, my love life has been put on public display by the media, who mainly highlight the most tumultuous aspects using extremely sexist remarks,” Martin tells Apple Music. “No man would be treated like that. I actually got to a point where I thought I was the problem. But eventually I felt like setting the record straight.” In each of these songs, she dissects her past breakups as a way of starting fresh on more solid footing and focusing resolutely on brighter horizons, all through a vintage ’70s lens.

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Cœur de pirate – Child of Light (2014) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Cœur de pirate – Child of Light (2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 49:56 minutes | 525 MB | Genre: Soundtrack
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Bravo musique

Coeur de Pirate is a Québécoise singer/songwriter and pianist who made her acclaimed eponymous album debut in 2008 and eventually rose to Top Five success in France the following year with her smash hit single “Comme des Enfants.” Born Beatrice Martin on September 22, 1989, in Quebec, Canada, she began playing piano at age three and was educated in Montreal. She began her recording career in 2007, posting demo versions of her songs on MySpace. Around this same time, she began playing keyboards in the acclaimed Montreal-based indie pop band Bonjour Brumaire. As a solo artist, she made her full-length album debut in 2008 with the eponymous album Coeur de Pirate on the label Grosse Boîte. While the album was championed right away by indie pop scenesters in Quebec, it caught on more steadily from a commercial standpoint and was given a big boost when photographer Francis Vachon used the album track “Ensemble” in a YouTube video that became a viral hit on the Internet. Nominated for Francophone Album of the Year at the 2009 Juno Awards, Coeur de Pirate was released in France in 2009 in association with Universal Music. It became a big hit there, reaching the Top Ten of the French albums chart for several weeks in summer 2009 and spawning the Top Five hit single “Comme des Enfants.” The French version of Coeur de Pirate features a duet with Nouvelle Star season five winner Julien Doré on the song “Pour un Infidèle” whereas the Canadian version features a duet with Jimmy Hunt. In addition to her solo work as Coeur de Pirate, Martin founded Pearls, an English-language side project that made its debut on MySpace. Another collaboration, Armistice, featured Bedouin Soundclash’s Jay Malinowski and members of the Bronx; the group released an EP in 2011. Late that year, Coeur de Pirate’s second album Blonde arrived. Martin announced she was pregnant in February 2012, giving birth to a daughter that September. For a while afterward, Martin focused on soundtrack work, writing music for Radio-Canada’s medical TV drama Trauma in 2013 and the Ubisoft video game Child of Light in 2014. The following year, she returned with Roses, the first Coeur de Pirate album to feature half its songs in English and half in French. In 2016, she performed in Les Souliers Rouges, a musical retelling of Michael Powell’s film The Red Shoes that also featured songs written and performed by Marc Lavoine and Arthur H, and music by composer Fabrice Aboulker. ~ Jason Birchmeier

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