Solène Delinger 12:30 p.m., January 31, 2023

In an interview with "World" for the "Time" section on Friday January 27, Zazie recalled painful childhood memories.

The interpreter of "I am a man" explains that he grew up in an environment where "a deaf violence reigned".

She got out thanks to the support of her big brother Philippe.

Zazie did not have an easy childhood … In an interview with our colleagues from the

World

Friday, January 27 for the section

The time

, the 58-year-old singer remembered several particularly painful episodes.

Insomniac and sleepwalker Zazie

Insomniac and sleepwalker, little Zazie tended to leave her room at night.

Her parents, worried about her wanderings, ended up finding a radical solution: strap the little girl to her bed.

If Zazie does not consider this act as abuse, she has very bad memories of it.

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"Family, for me, is nonsense"

She thus confides that she "dreamed of escaping from a dysfunctional family where the only language that was spoken correctly was music and where a deaf violence reigned, not always deaf, moreover".

The singer could only count on her big brother Philippe, who helped her a lot in this period of deep despair: "Thank God, I had a big brother, a year and a half apart. We spent hours, years , to invent stories”, she remembers in the columns of the

World.

"We were tacitly and unconsciously united", analyzes the singer before adding: The family, for me, is nonsense", she adds. This is not the first time that Zazie has mentioned her family " a little dysfunctional". At the microphone of M Radio, the singer had already evoked memories "a little chaotic in some ways".