Former Bran Van 3000 singer Stphane Moraille gets personal with #MeToo-inspired song - Action News
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Former Bran Van 3000 singer Stphane Moraille gets personal with #MeToo-inspired song

"I wanted to be free. I wanted every word to be a reflection of my heart," says Stphane Moraille of her new English & Creole solo album, Dava.

Moraille sings about sexual violence on new solo track, Reckoning

"If you're championing other people's truth and you don't find it inside yourself to offer your truth to the world, there's a contradiction in that," says Stphane Moraille, on singing about her experience with sexual violence. (Franois Nadeau/Audiogram)

Listening back to her belt-it-out chorus on Drinking in L.A., the 1997 smash hit from Montreal's Bran Van 3000, it may be hard to believe that, 20 yearsand a law career later, Stphane Moraille had forgotten what it was like to let her voice soar on stage.

"I had, completely. I was in my lawyer shoes," she said,in an interview on CBC Radio's All in a Weekend. "I mean, I was perfectly happy in my kitchen in Boucherville, singing to my heart's content."

But a phone call from Audiogram, the band's label, brought her back to studio for the first time in years to record a new version of Drinking in L.A. for an anniversary album andplanted the seeds for her new project.

She already had a lot on her plateas anentertainment lawyer, so if she was going to come out of musical retirement for her first solo album, she was going to do it her way.

It was going to be raw and it was going to be real.

"I wanted to be free. I wanted every word to be a reflection of my heart," she said.

'A war against my body'

On her album Dava Haitian Creole for "diver" Morailledelves into deep emotional territory while still producing what she calls "feel good, all day, everywhere music."

Expensive speaks of self worth and the Creole trackFanm Vanyanis an ode to the strength of Haitian women.

But the deepest emotional dive is Reckoning a powerful anthem against sexual violence co-written with Jim Corcoran, host of CBCRadio's A Propos.

Sitting in a radio studio, mics on and cameras rolling, Moraillehesitateda beat before explaining what the song is about.

"It's about rape."

"I think at one degree or another ... on the surface of the skin or bone deep, almost every woman had to face sexual aggression. It happened to me," she said, quietly.

She doesn't go into detail, but talks about the toll it took emotionally and physicallya ballet dancer at the time, she says she developed anorexia.

"The aggression against me turned into a war against my body, because I had no outlet," she said.

"The whole album was about being raw," says Stphane Moraille of her first solo album Dava. (Georges Fok/Audiogram)

That outlet she'd been searching for seemed to fall from the skywhen Corcoranapproached her with a poem he'd written, inspired by the #MeToo movement.

"It was such a beautiful movement to see all these women claiming the media space and do what the courts could never do for them," said Moraille.

"Because if you analyze the history of court cases in rape and sexual aggression, we've failed as a society to protect women."

She decided this was the moment to not just follow from the aisles, but to join the chorus.

"If you're championing other people's truth and you don't find it inside yourself to offer your truth to the world, there's a contradiction in that," she said.

It's thatraw authenticitycoupled with the sharp edges of her voice and some infectious dance beats that give the albumits power. Yet, Moraille is still uneasy about sharing such an intimate piece of work with the world.

"I was a fool to do so! Because look, I can't even talk about it now!" she said before laughing, wiping her tears and continuing the conversation.