There are rare, powerful, and timeless voices that grab you from the very first listen. Bobbie's voice follows in the footsteps of the greats she has admired since childhood, with Joni Mitchell and Dolly Parton at the forefront. Bobbie grew up an hour's train ride from the French capital, but it was in the United States that she drew her musical inspirations, lulled by the blues and soul vinyls inherited from her father. Her first album, 11 songs crafted to hit straight to the heart, sounds like an Americana folk classic. Bobbie traces her intimate and melancholic journey towards her dream, like a road movie: the grief of losing her father when she was a child, which replays and colors her love life, the courage to leave troubled waters and emancipate herself to allow herself to follow her star. The organ, pedal steel, and gospel choirs arrange the album in the tradition of the genre and dress it with nostalgia, a central theme that inspired the album's title track: "The Sacred in the Ordinary," or the art of finding, as in a childhood snack at her grandmother's house, the sacred in the ordinary.