They made the birds laugh and dance the squirrels, in the 90s. And they will be on the village of the Route du Rhum on November 1st. Thursday, The Creole Company will blackmail the Brasserie du Rhum! With his new song, the well-known Route du Rhum, to discover here.

Chance does things well, sometimes. Thursday, November 1, he will even sing Creole Company, present from 19 h 30 at the Brasserie du Rhum, on the eponymous village installed around the port of Saint-Malo.

"It was only a few months ago. Jean-Pierre Rusconi, Patrick Sebastien's former pianist, suggested that I listen to the song he wrote on the Route du Rhum, " says Clemence Bringtown, the singer of the Creole Company.

"Simple and cheerful"

The song, "simple, very cheerful" touched Clemence Bringtown. "I am the daughter of a man of the sea. I have always had great admiration for these brave men. We immediately wanted to do it, this song! "

After, things chained themselves. Mixing in the same desire Damoiseau Rums, who organize an evening on the village on November 1, and the Brasserie du Rhum, which hosts this evening.

The Creole Company will be there too! "We will sing three songs from our album La Mer, in preparation," continues Clemence Bringtown.

"Not looking! "

The song The Route du Rhum , then, but also Santa Maria de Guadeloupe and Yole la Rivé. "And if we are asked to sing It makes the birds laugh, we will do it! We are not watching!" Clemence Bringtown says in a loud laugh.

Clémence Bringtown on vocals, José Sébéloué on guitar, Julien Tarquin on bass, Guy Bevert on drums, accompanied by "Alain on keyboards and Johanna, chorister" , Compagnie Créole will be almost complete, since Arthur Apatout has left the group.

Two albums

"After a great tour of forty dates that took us from the Pacific to Florida or Canada, from February to April, we shot in the south of France, last summer. "

The group is also working on two albums. One dedicated to the sea, another of gospels and spiritual niggers, for the benefit of research against sickle cell disease.