Laetitia Shériff
Biography
Whether with François Jeanneau (founder of the Jazz Pandemonium orchestra), Psykick Lyrikah , Lydia Lunch , the hacker Noël Akchoté , or with his band Trunks , Laetitia Sheriff dragged his galloches into rich and varied universes. Her musical career located somewhere between Scott Walker , Scout Niblett and Sonic Youth began in 2004 with Codification , an intimate creation on which she is accompanied by Olivier Mellano , and Gaël Desbois (Mobili ); She reiterates the experience of the trio on nervous Games Over (2008), and the most experimental Often False (2010), but this time with François Jeanneau and Thomas Poli. 2012 sees Laetitia collaborate with Robert the Magnificent, and Thomas Poli ( Dominique A ), the result A Midsummer Night's Dream, a quasi instrumental album that is the soundtrack of A Dream of a Summer Night by Shakespeare directed by David Gauchard. After Where's My ID? an EP 4 tracks released in 2012, the lady returns in 2014 with a new mischief, Pandemonium Solace and Stars, released in October by Yotanka ( Zenzile, The Proceedings ...), there is the title The Living Dead, whose video is directed by Marie Larrivé . The same year Laetitia made an appearance on Ez3kiel's LUX album , interpreting the vocals of the title Eclipse , which Beth Gibbons probably wouldn't have pushed. She then followed the EP The Anticipation in 2015, again with Thomas Poli, and Nicolas Courret behind the drums. Laetitia returns at the end of 2020 in the same configuration to submit her sixth album: Stillness .
.
Discography
Stillness
2020
The Anticipation
2015
Pandemonium, Solace and Stars
2014
Where's My ID?
2012
A Midsummer Night's Dream
2012
Live Chapelle de Vendôme
2010
Often False
2010
Games Over
2008
4'30''
2007
Codification
2004