RORI

RORI invites us into an oeuvre that mixes different styles and underlines her electrician and great love for pop culture.

Rori, Camille, Camille, Rori; for a long time it was hard to distinguish where Camille ended and her alter ego started. After fate painfully put a stop to project BEFFROI during its rise to fame, the young Belgian focused on her solo project RORI.

Since 2020 she released several singles that upon their release gave us a glimpse of the new dimension into which she would be taking us. With over a million streams and an established radio presence, RORI’s comeback is already a success.

When you re-discover ‘Truth Hurts’, ‘The Same Way’, ‘Gotta Get Mine’ or even ‘C’est La Vie’, you realise these songs were simply an experiment, or rather, a laboratory to better define what was to come. With a first EP in the works, the promises of her singles are coming true. From now on, she knows exactly what she wants and this is manifest in her clear wish to sing in French exclusively.

Gone is the fear of revealing herself. RORI finally puts herself in the spotlight and turns herself into the voice of her generation. The voice that breaks taboos and wants to take things further, the voice for which singing is therapy.

On her comeback EP, RORI invites us into an oeuvre that mixes different styles and underlines her eclecticism and great love for pop culture. Listening to her music, you can easily hear her influences: the teenager who devoured Nana manga’s while listening to the opening chords of Artic Monkeys’ Tranquility Based Hotel and Casino.

Docteur, the EP’s first single, clearly shows RORI’s objective: to offer us a raw, unadorned look at her everyday problems. RORI is cheerful, open and shows us her current take on life: Don’t take things too seriously; life goes on. Docteur is a modern and exciting pop song that gets all of us on board.