For all musicians and artists who are like many software engineers that think it's just an AI.
@🗺️ Twayka 🌏: You’re right, and I respect that you don’t use Suno.
But never forget: the voice you have is a gift from the divine. A real voice is not just a sound file. It carries age, memory, culture, pain, joy, and soul.
Yesterday, while visiting a small vide-maison near my place, I found this vintage record. I took a photo, listened to the song, and it reminded me that music existed long before FL Studio, Ableton, autotune, or any AI tool.
I grew up with K7 tapes. I remember going out just to buy music. I still remember one of the first songs that touched me on RTCI: “Belle” from Notre-Dame de Paris.
As a developer, I understand that a voice can be represented as data, patterns, frequencies, and bytes. But for me, AI is not replacing music. I use it as a bridge between memory, emotion, technology, and the musical experience I already carry inside me.
Music is bigger than software.
Bigger than a tool.
Bigger than the debate.
With full respect for your talent. 🎧
Fernand Raynaud was not mainly a “singer” in the modern pop-star sense. He was primarily a French stage comedian, actor, music-hall performer, and comic singer.
'Un clair de lune à Maubeuge' was composed around 1961 by Pierre Perrin, who was a Paris taxi driver, with music credited to Pierre Perrin and Claude Blondy. It became a big popular success and was covered by several performers, with Bourvil’s 1962 version often cited as the best-known one.
#FernandRaynaud #UnClairDeLuneAMaubeuge #VinylCulture #VintageMusic #FrenchChanson #FrenchMusic #OldRecords #MusicHistory #AnalogSoul #DigitalAge #AIAndMusic #HumanExpression #TwaykaMusic #PlaineGare #RueilMalmaison