Solène Delinger 4:43 p.m., January 26, 2023, modified at 4:45 p.m., January 26, 2023

In an interview with "Paris Match" Thursday, January 26, Patrick Bruel gave a little rant against a remark that is always made to his audience.

The singer, whose new album "Encore une fois" has been certified gold, does not appreciate that his fans are taken for "brainless midinettes". 

At 63, Patrick Bruel is no longer afraid to say the things that bother him.

In an interview with

Paris Match

on Thursday January 26, the interpreter of

 Breaking the voice

explained that he could no longer bear a remark regularly made to his audience, still as loyal after more than thirty years of career. 

"I've always had enough of it"

"But are you aware that as soon as your name is mentioned, the comments are either about poker or about your hysterical popularity? For thirty years people have always illustrated it with a 'Patriiiick!'", he told him. first reminded the journalists of

Paris Match 

"That, on the other hand, the 'Patriiiick!', I'm a little fed up", rebounded Patrick Bruel before pushing a little rant: "I even still have it fed up, because when people like to repeat it, it's a condescending way to pass off my audience for brainless midinettes". 

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A "way to reach" Patrick Bruel

For the singer, this remark is above all a way of attacking him.

"I'm not fooled because this gimmick is a way to reach me: to reduce these fans to an expression, it is to reduce my work. Because, notice well: in all the concerts, the public always shouts the first name of the singer and we don't talk about it as much". 

Patrick Bruel also took advantage of his interview to discuss his family life.

His two sons, Oscar (20), and Léon (18), live in the United States with their mother Amanda Sthers. 

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 The sons of Patrick Bruel settled in Los Angeles with Amanda Sthers: does he want his ex-wife?

"I'm often in the United States where my sons are studying, but I mainly live in France. If I need to see my children, even for three or four days, I don't mind making the trip," says Patrick Bruel who recently bought a house across the Atlantic to feel at home during his visits to his sons.