Guest Monday of the program of Anne Roumanoff "It feels good", the DJ Bob Sinclar tells what he learned from his recent dive into the archives of his concerts.

A flashback, made to occupy time during the first confinement, which makes him regret the party world of the 1990s.

INTERVIEW

No, "the party was not better before".

Bob Sinclar is adamant.

However, the French DJ regrets one thing in the party world of his debut: the absence of a cell phone in the evening.

This is what he explains Monday at the microphone of Anne Roumanoff in the program 

It feels good

.

According to him, this small object, omnipresent in our daily life, has changed the way of dancing and of meeting.

But not only.

>> Find all of Anne Roumanoff's shows from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Europe 1 in replay and podcast here

"For a year, I put my nose back in my archives. I recently reposted the recording of an evening that I had done at the Queen for the release of an album called

Africanism

", explains the DJ.

"I saw the dancefloor and there was something that shocked me. I didn't know what."

"I wonder what they are filming"

Then Bob Sinclar finally understands what makes him tick: "There is no telephone! Nobody films me, nobody. Everyone appreciates the moment", he is surprised. 

"I'm happy that people film me", nuance Bob Sinclar.

"But when they stay for a quarter of an hour, at the start of the evening, with their arms above their heads to hold their phones, I wonder what they're filming. There's just a DJ playing records. , there is nothing else. Even though I always surround myself with pretty things. "

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"I'm a little nostalgic for the party without a phone," he regrets.

"Today, with social media, we need to show our friends and everyone where we are and how lucky we are to be there. It's a style."

But that's not Bob Sinclar's style.