@Delavierose
Rachelle Ramirez
@Delavierose · 4:59

Women, Culture and Cities

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Aside from her tragedies, she brought these tragedies into her music and her passion so you could hear it from her music and listen to Lisa MOA dance, say which saying let me dance, let me dance. It's an upbeat tune, mind you. But her voice, you could tell she's saying, let me dance, let me dance through life. And Letomptiff, it's also very tragic in some sense, but her voice goes through. And she is a very lovely woman

#womenofparis #storytelling #montmartr

@DBPardes
Deborah Pardes
@DBPardes · 0:34
Wow. You have me at her recording in eleven languages. I need to know more about her. I need to listen to her music. Can you do me a favor and reply and in the description spell her name out and some keywords so I can Google her properly? I haven't had success doing it while I was listening to you. Thank you for bringing her to our attention. She said. Sounds amazing and important and inspiring and I just want to know more. Please
@Delavierose
Rachelle Ramirez
@Delavierose · 1:58

@DBPardes

Hi. Thanks for listening. Yes, Dalida is spelled D-A-L-I-D-A so one of her famous songs is Liza Moudense. You can look it up in Amazon Music or Spotify Apple Music. She is wonderful. I'm having her song played in the background while I'm recording this. As you can see, or sorry, as you can hear, it's really upbeat. I like to play it when I just want to get up and go. And it's inspiring. She is a diva
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