In agreement with Zamora Productions
We don’t forget the first time we hear Ann O’aro sing. Her magnetic voice and wild writing provoke strong emotions. A revelation of the Reunionese music scene, she is fully in line with the tradition of maloya, this musical style inherited from the songs of slaves of Reunion Island which carries the voice of the oppressed and resistant of the island. Ann O’aro gives us a flayed maloya that addresses her personal history and the taboos of her island (cultural discrimination, sexual violence and alcoholism, in French and Creole).