Maxime Rodolphe Nouchy, known as Maxim Nucci and Yodelice (born 23 February 1979 in Créteil), is a French singer-songwriter who performs in English. He has released five albums as of 2014: "Maxim Nucci" (2006), Tree of Life (2009), Cardioid (2010), "Square Eyes" (2013) and "Like a Million Dreams" (2014). The songs belong to folk, rock and pop music. He is also known for his acting performance in Guillaume Canet's film Little White Lies (French title: Les Petits Mouchoirs) with Marion Cotillard in 2010. The song "Talk to me" was featured.

Yodelice
(Maxim Nucci)
Maxim Nucci in Marseille (2009).
Maxim Nucci in Marseille (2009).
Background information
Birth nameMaxime Rodolphe Nouchy
Born (1979-02-23) 23 February 1979 (age 45)
Créteil, France
GenresFolk, Pop
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, musician
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar, piano
Years active2001 – present
LabelsUniversal
Member ofMax
Websiteyodelice.com

Life

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Maxim Nucci was born in Créteil, an eastern suburb of Paris, on 23 February 1979. He entered the conservatory of music at the age of six, and learned to play the piano and the guitar. When he was 15, he began to attend classes at the Musician Institute of London. After graduation, he became the youngest teacher of the academy in 1994.[citation needed][clarification needed]

Nucci had been playing with his band, Max, in England when he sent a demo to several record labels.[citation needed] Universal Music France expressed interest.[1]

He had a child with Jenifer Bartoli, the first winner of the French Star academy.

Career

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Nucci appeared on television during 2001. He partly composed the first album by L5–a female band created during a popular reality TV show, Popstars. He also helped the debut singers in recording their album.[citation needed]

His first single "Dis à l'amour".

In 2004, he starred as an actor and a composer in Alive, directed by Frédéric Berthe, in which a producer works with a gifted young songwriter and they find success together. The film was not a box-office success.[citation needed]

Nucci released an eponymous album in 2006.

Nucci went to Spain in the Casa Yodelice and start writing new songs, and re-emerged as Yodelice.[2]

The project was named the Casa Yodelice and the "Spookland" world is said to epitomize the peculiar atmosphere of its music, between life appetite and melancholy.[by whom?]

Yodelice was awarded the best new artist prize during the 2010 Victoires de la Musique.[3][4]

Discography

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Albums

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As Maxim Nucci
Year Album Peak positions Certifications
FRA
[5]
BEL
(Wa)

[6]

SUI
[7]
2006 Maxim Nucci
As Yodelice
Year Album Peak positions Certifications
FRA
[5]
BEL
Wa

[6]
SUI
[7]
2009 Tree of Life 11 34 84
2010 Cardioid 9 21 38
2013 Square Eyes 11 46 49
2014 Like a Million Dreams 38 66

Soundtracks

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  • 2004: Alive (soundtrack of film)

Singles

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As Maxim Nucci
Year Single Peak positions Album
FRA
[5]
BEL
Wa

(Ultratop)
[6]
SUI
[7]

2004 "La cour des anges" 63
"Dis à l'amour" 5
2013 "Talk to Me" 25
As Yodelice
Year Single Peak positions Album
FRA
[5]
BEL
Wa

(Ultratop)
[6]
SUI
[7]

2009 "Sunday with a Flu" 12 69 Cardioid
2010 "More Than Meets the Eye" 90 61
2013 "Fade Away" 72 Square Eyes
Promotional singles (as Yodelice)
  • 2009: "Free"
  • 2010: "Emergency"

References

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  1. ^ "Maxim NUCCI – News & actus people sur Premiere" (in French). Premiere.fr. 23 February 1979. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  2. ^ "Yodelice | biographie, clips, news, photos". MTV.FR. 30 July 2010. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  3. ^ "French singer Yodelice performs during the 26th Victoires de la Musique French music awards ceremony in Lille – Yahoo! News". In.news.yahoo.com. 10 February 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  4. ^ "Yodelice vidéo Victoires de la Musique". Top-news.fr. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d LesCharts.com: Maxim Nucci discography
  6. ^ a b c d Ultratop.be/fr/ Maxim Nucci discography Archived 18 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ a b c d hitparade.ch: Maxim Nucci discography Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
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