| Inna Modja has feline  eyes and a velvety voice full of soul.   The 2nd album of this young song writer and singer is due to  come out on November the   7th, 2011, and she has already offered us a catchy little single to  rock the summer away: FRENCH CANCAN,  MR SAINTE NITOUCHE.   This soon to be  released album, LOVE  REVOLUTION, is a little less acoustic than the previous one, and  uncovers a new dimension of the singer, who's managed to keep her fresh  outlook, but often with a touch of melancholy. Inna Modja opens a colourful  range of musical cravings that are simultaneously crazy and impressive,  powerful and instinctive, with orchestral arrangements and the intimate sound  of a piano and a guitar. Be it an effort to rehabilitate love, or a look into  happy and unhappy daily events affecting the lives of each one of us, LOVE REVOLUTION is the work of an inquisitive, sensitive and creative artist. Some of her new  tracks even blend some French to her English lyrics, something she hadn't yet  dared to do.    Inna was born  in Bamako in Mali, and  quickly developed a lively and playful temperament, a bit on the wild side, so  that she could fit in among her 6 siblings. Her father is an Oxford educated Malian diplomat who spent  many years in the UK  and collects albums by Ray Charles, Otis Redding,  Ella Fitzgerald or Billy Holliday.   Her mother is from Guinea  and loves traditional African music, such as that of Myriam  Makeba, but also the work of Serge  Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin. As for  her brothers and sisters, they grew up to the  sounds of disco and pop music, before discovering the 90's US rap, Soul, Hard  Rock, Jazz and Blues. Not hard then  to understand why music is so important to Inna.
 The entire  family moved to Ghana, where the wild little 6 year old was enrolled in many  activities, such as karate lessons, painting classes, dancing and music school,  in an effort to channel her exuberant energy, and the house quickly filled up  with the songs she learned at choir. The nickname  "Modja"  was given to her by her mother and means literally "Little Pest" in  Peul. It stuck to her and she finally chose it as her artist's name.
 After some  years the family moved back to Bamako.  By then, Inna is an outgoing and friendly young teenager who's writing her fists  songs. At 15 she has mastered her voice, which has taken on some deeper tones,  and dreams of becoming a singer. She decides to knock at  the door of Salif Keita, the famous Malian  singer, who's taken aback by such audacity. He rapidly falls under the spell of  her willpower and her voice. He sends her to see the Super Rail Band De Bamako, a band of senior swingers, of which he himself is a  member, and to the musician and singer, Habib Koité.  In the midst of all these artists, she rapidly learns the way a band works and  how various instruments interact musically, as there are no musicians in her  own family.
   At the age of  18, Inna moves to Paris  to study literature and languages before turning to business studies. At the  same time she's recruited by a big modelling agency and works as a model for 8  years. In Paris  and New York,  having met graph artists who initiate her to Street Art, she goes from glass  painting to painting on walls!  Today still,  living in Paris,  she has kept her passion for various forms of art and expression, and when  she's not busy writing songs, she's off somewhere shooting short movies with her friends. 
                              There is  however one final challenge she must overcome before fully becoming a singer.  She has to learn to free her soul and body from an ancient wound. Unknown to  her parents, she underwent excision at the age of four, like her sisters. Inna  does her very best to get by while living with these horrific memories. This  situation soon proves to be unbearable, but a surgical operation gives her back  her physical integrity and opens a new direction in her life... Some years  later, she becomes one of the patrons of Tostan, a humanitarian organization  that fights to improve the lives of African women.
    In 2007, five  demo tracks convince Warner to sign on the young singer. Her first album, EVERYDAY IS A  NEW WORLD comes out at the end of 2009 and the name, music and voice  of Inna Modja quickly become a revelation at the crossroads of pop, soul and folk music. Some time later  she makes the acquaintance of Alexandre Azaria, a musician and song  writer with whom she records, in 2010, a cover version of Life,  the hit song by English singer Des’Ree,  written with the help of Prince Sampson who  will send Inna a little congratulatory note.
                              She then gets  Alexandre to work on some of her songs, with no particular purpose in mind,  just for the love of music. Their collaboration  will lead to a true complicity and finally to an entire album.One day they  write a song together. The next, they enjoy a glass of saké or a cup of tea,  while chatting and listening to the old Blues, Rockabilly and Motown classics.
 Alex Azaria,  who played in a variety of bands, such as Le Cri de la Mouche, Niagara or Indochine, has since made a name for himself  writing the scores for many films. The collaboration of these two artists is  rich in harmony and spontaneity, and gives rise to the songs that make up this  album. "Alex trusts in my instinct and I have much admiration for his  talent. While recording in the studio I have learnt to let my audacity run  free" explains Inna.
   In a mixture of  pop and brass band sounds, the song Big Apple was written by Inna on a grey morning full of cross-Atlantic yearnings, and  blends gospel choirs and guitar rhythms. In Emily,  the lyrics talk of an encounter in a train with a young woman and her daughter  who miraculously survived the earthquake that killed their entire family in Haiti.  French  Cancan, Mr Sainte Nitouche, is the first  song of her second album and the hit of the summer of 2011, revealing a mixture  of pop and soul sounds: it's a perfect remedy to gloom. It's both mischievous  and refreshing, with lyrics in English and French. Inna also takes pleasure in  playing with the words and lyrics of her songs. The title Kinks In My Hair (a reference to her  natural style), is a statement of her pride of being herself in a overly  standardised world; Ex-Girlfriend is  about clingy ex-girlfriends, whereas  You Love Me, reminds us that loved ones  are never alone, even in the most difficult moments.
 The album LOVE REVOLUTION will warm your spirit and your soul and is sometimes reminiscent of  the music of Morcheeba and  Macy Gray…
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