Zaho de Sagazan | |
Birth Name: | Zaho Mélusine Le Moniès de Sagazan |
Birth Date: | 28 December 1999 |
Birth Place: | Saint-Nazaire, France |
Years Active: | 2021-present |
Label: | Virgin Records |
Zaho Mélusine Le Moniès de Sagazan (in French pronounced as /zao melyzin lə mɔnjɛs də saɡazɑ̃/; born 28 December 1999), known as Zaho de Sagazan, is a French singer-songwriter and musician. In March 2023, she published her first album La Symphonie des éclairs which gained her quick notability. In February 2024, she was nominated in five categories at the 39th Victoires de la Musique ceremony and won four prizes including those for original song and album of the year.
Zaho Le Moniès de Sagazan was born on December 28, 1999, in Saint-Nazaire in France.[1] She is the daughter of painter, sculptor and performer Olivier de Sagazan and Gaëlle Le Rouge de Rusunan, a teacher.[2] [3] She has three older sisters and a twin. She is the cousin of the director Lorraine de Sagazan.[4] During her childhood in Saint-Nazaire, she practiced dance extensively often up to seven hours a week. She studied at and graduated from the Aristide-Briand high school, with a concentration in science. She went to Nantes to study business and administration management, worked for a year as a care assistant in a nursing home before embarking on a singing career.[5]
Zaho de Sagazan started posting musical videos of herself on Instagram in 2015. It included many covers and some original compositions. In 2016, in her first stage appearance, she performed La Bonne Étoile at the Simone Veil theater in Saint-Nazaire during the Salade concert at the Aristide-Briand high school. She continued to appear at the theater until 2019.[6] From 2021, she started participating in numerous music festivals such as Printemps de Bourges, Nuits de Fourvière, Les Francofolies de La Rochelle, Les Escales de Saint-Nazaire, Rock en Seine and Les Rockomotives de Vendôme.[7] In September 2021, Zaho de Sagazan performed on the stage of the Vendanges musicales in Charnay in Beaujolais. In 2021, she played with Mansfield.TYA at the Trianon theater and at the Olympia in Paris which brought her recognition.At the Trans Musicales de Rennes in 2022, she performed on the stage during the five evenings of the festival.[8] On March 31, 2023, Zaho de Sagazan released her first album, La Symphonie des éclairs on Virgin Records.[3] Though she had a few singles beforehand, her first appearances on stage for the new album and the subsequent media coverage allowed her to gain fame and notoriety. In a few months, she went from being almost unknown to the a high hope of the French music.[2] [9] The album was certified Platinum in April 2024 after reaching the threshold of 100,000 copies sold.[10] In January 2024, she was nominated for the Music Moves Europe Talent Awards.[11] Shortly after that, she received five lastinations at the 39th Victoires de la Musique ceremony where she won the awards for best original song, best album, best stage revelation and best female revelation.[12]
In May 2024, she performed at the opening of the Cannes Film Festival by covering David Bowie's song Modern Love in tribute to the president of the jury Greta Gerwig.[13] [14] [15]
On August 11, 2024, de Sagazan performed at the 2024 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in Paris. She sang "Sous le ciel de Paris", accompanied by the choir of the Académie Haendel-Hendrix.[16]
She has said that she was passionate about electronic music from the 1980s, from Krautrock to Darksynth, while being encouraged by French songs, notably by Jacques Brel and Barbara.[2] She also cites Tom Odell as one of her main influences.[17] On stage, she is often accompanied by Tom Geffray, multi-instrumentalist, and musicians from the Inuit group (Alexis Delong and Pierre Cheguillaume).[2] Zaho de Sagazan is hypersensitive, a subject mentioned in the song La Symphonie des éclairs.[7] At the 39th Victoires de la Musique ceremony, when she won the prize for best original song, she said on the subject: “One day I discovered music, and I realized that by crying over my piano did me a lot of good, it didn't hurt anyone and above all it gave pretty songs. I realized that what I thought was my greatest flaw in life was ultimately my greatest quality (...) To be sensitive is to be alive, and we are never too alive.”[18]