The self-proclaimed Montrealer — and we validate — “half-Chinese, half-activist, half-rapper of [nos coeurs] » presents a latest album, ripe fruit falls but not in your mouth, really very interesting. Neither pop, nor electronic, nor hip-hop, nor R&B, but all of that at the same time, for the best only, the music brings joy from the first melodies of Born the Shape. Hua Li then invites us to a moment of letting go and satisfaction, a bit casual, during the ten tracks that make up this ultra-well-produced record where the flow of the artist. It had been several weeks since Hua Li had piqued our curiosity, with the extract Cherrierin particular, and the rest of ripe fruit falls but not in your mouth deliciously lives up to our expectations. Let us highlight the two collaborations, Feed Me Petals (with Ambrose Getz) and Whip Around (with Darkus Millon), who prove that this close friend of Gayance always knows how to surround herself well and transforms everything she touches into gold.
To watch on video