Médisances is an elegant French word for "slander" or "malicious gossip". It's not just simple chatter; it specifically refers to speaking ill of someone, especially when they're not there.
In the song, ZAZ powerfully sings of being the victim "De cent médisances à mi-voix" (Of a hundred slanders in a whisper). This single word captures the pain of betrayal by those who pretend to be kind to her face, painting a vivid picture of the emotional struggle at the heart of the song.
Mon Cœur Tu Es Fou is ZAZ’s fiery confession of a heart that refuses to stay quiet.
Right from the opening line, she admits she doesn’t know what she wants. Her restless eyes and freshly broken heart push her into dark corners, keeping her awake at night. Yet instead of collapsing, she addresses her own heart like a wild friend: “Mon cœur, tu es fou” - “My heart, you are crazy.” That “crazy” heart keeps her alive with a fierce-yet-tender flame, even after being branded by hatred.
In the second half she turns her spotlight on the back-stabbers around her. These people smile to her face then slash her with whispered gossip, calling her “a whore” or “a lunatic with problems.” ZAZ replies with raw irony and unwavering strength: although their words hurt, her heart keeps beating louder, fueled by that same flame. The song is both a lament and a declaration of freedom - a reminder that pain, passion, rage and resilience can coexist in one “crazy” heart that simply refuses to give up.
ZAZ is the stage name of Isabelle Geffroy, a French singer and songwriter born in Tours in 1980. Trained at a regional conservatory from childhood, she blends jazz, French chanson, soul and acoustic styles, and her warm, raspy voice has often been compared to Édith Piaf.
She broke through in 2010 with 'Je veux', the lead single from her self-titled debut album, which topped the charts in France, Belgium and Switzerland and sold hundreds of thousands of copies worldwide. The song's joyful rejection of money and status for love and freedom made her one of the most recognizable voices in modern French music.