Vaï | |
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Birth name | Adil Takhssait |
Born | April 24, 1979 |
Origin | Morocco |
Genres | rap, Hip-Hop |
Occupations | Singer, rapper |
Instruments | vocals |
Years active | 1994-present |
Labels | K.Pone Inc Music Group |
Website | Vai-media.com |
Adil Takhssait better known by his stage name Vaï as a solo act,[1] and earlier as Mélo (or Melopsy) (during his membership of Les Messagers du Son (LMDS), is a Canadian (Quebec) rap and hip-hop musician of Moroccan origin. Adil Takhssait was born 24 April 1979 in Paris (France) in an Moroccan family and immigrated to Canada in 1993, and established himself in Montreal, Quebec.[2] He is an author compositor and performer. He is presently signed to K.Pone.Inc record label.
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Adil Takhssait formed in 1994 his first band LMDS abbreviation of Les Messagers Du Son[2] with his classmate and friend Cyril Kamar (later on K'Maro). Adil took the name "Mélo" (Mélopsy) whereas Cyril Kamar took the name Lyrik.
LMDS, Les Messagers du Son has had two successful albums, Les Messagers du Son in 1997 and Il Faudrait Leur Dire in (1999). The self-titled debut album of LMDS Les Messagers du Son issued in 1997 achieved top positions in the Quebec charts and the duo were appeared at Les FrancoFolies de Montréal music festival in 1999.[2] They followed that by "Il faudrait leur dire" [3] and a compilation released in France, where both had resided for some time.
After the break-up of the group in 2001, both Adil Takhssait and Cyril Kamar have continued with solo careers
Soon after the break-up, Adil issued his solo breakthrough album Street Life[2] with the single coming from the album and also entitled "Street Life" featured Zaho and sampled on "Sweet Dreams" by Annie Lennox.
The "Tous Héros" about boxing and violence and gained cult status amongst fans. The song sampled on James Brown hit "It's A Man's World".
His follow-up album Ma raison in 2008 includes the single "Sur ma vie" was featured in the daily Top 5 chart in Canadian French language cable television specialty channel MusiMax
He was also featured in Zoxea's song "Reste calme" and in DJ Blast's "Un homme à part".
His "Visages tristes" is about the Arab-Israeli conflict using samplings from the soundtrack of Schindler's List
Tracks of the album
Tracks of the album:
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