SINGER

Zaz

1980 - Today

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Isabelle Geffroy (born 1 May 1980), known professionally as Zaz, is a French singer and songwriter who mixes jazz, French variety, soul and acoustic. She is known for her single "Je veux", taken from her self-titled debut album, released on 10 May 2010. She has five studio albums: Zaz, Recto verso, Paris, Effet miroir, and Isa, as well as two live albums: Sans tsu tsou and Sur la route. Worldwide as of February 2023 Zaz has sold over 5 million albums, including 2 million outside France. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Zaz is the 1,118th most popular singer (down from 497th in 2019), the 4,052nd most popular biography from France (down from 2,520th in 2019) and the 67th most popular French Singer.

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Among SINGERS

Among singers, Zaz ranks 1,118 out of 4,381Before her are Fish, Raquel Rastenni, Nadia Ali, Yasmin Levy, Randy Meisner, and Sabahudin Kurt. After her are Eva Nansen, Chava Alberstein, Pete Ham, Abbey Lincoln, Nikolai Slichenko, and Natacha Atlas.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Zaz ranks 69Before her are Mark Rober, John Arne Riise, Roman Weidenfeller, William Levy, Jordana Brewster, and Nadia Ali. After her are Markus Feehily, Akshata Murty, Ben Whishaw, Simon Helberg, Suella Braverman, and Randy Orton.

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In France

Among people born in France, Zaz ranks 4,052 out of 6,770Before her are Alfred Des Cloizeaux (1817), Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper (1856), Maurice Farman (1877), Emmanuelle Devos (1964), Jean Grémillon (1902), and Daniel-Rops (1901). After her are Daniel Boulanger (1922), Maxime Maufra (1861), Léon Serpollet (1858), Stéphane Javelle (1864), Hippolyte Aucouturier (1876), and Wladimir Aïtoff (1879).

Among SINGERS In France

Among singers born in France, Zaz ranks 67Before her are Julien Clerc (1947), Mathé Altéry (1927), Hortense Schneider (1833), Michèle Arnaud (1919), François Delsarte (1811), and Blondel de Nesle (1155). After her are Serge Lama (1943), Dany Dauberson (1925), Wolfgang Windgassen (1914), Jean Philippe (1931), Daniel Balavoine (1952), and Claude Nougaro (1929).