Remi Chauveau Notes
A portrait of Alice on the Roof as an artist of quiet strength, whose pastel‑lit universe, emotional honesty, and tender explorations of self‑image and becoming — from 15 ans to Change My World — reveal why her voice will endure.
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🌙💗 Alice on the Roof — Softness, Light, and the Quiet Power of Being ✨

29 March 2026
@taratataoff Le replay est disponible ur notre site. Alice On The Roof "15 Ans" (extrait) (2026) #Taratata #Nagui #AliceOnTheRoof ♬ son original - taratata

🌸 “15 ans”: The Mirror That Opens the Door to Alice’s Universe

In many ways, 15 ans is the emotional key that unlocks the entire world of Alice on the Roof. The song stands at the crossroads of adolescence and awakening, where the body becomes a battlefield and self‑acceptance feels like a distant shoreline. Its fragile honesty echoes the very heart of Alice’s artistry — a voice that never forces, never dramatizes, but reveals. Listening to 15 ans is like stepping into the first room of her universe: pastel‑lit, tender, and unafraid of truth. The track speaks to the invisible struggles that shape us, the quiet wars with mirrors, the hunger for belonging, and the slow, painful work of becoming oneself. It is the thread that ties her entire discography together, from the early glow of Easy Come Easy Go to the introspective calm of Miroir, miroir and the emotional clarity of Change My World. Through 15 ans, Alice doesn’t just sing about youth — she names the wounds we carry into adulthood, and in doing so, she offers the gentle reassurance that healing is possible, and that softness can be a form of strength.

🎶 ✨🌙🌫️💗🎤🌿💫🌸🕊️🌧️🎧🌟 🔊 15 ans - Alice on the Roof




Alice on the Roof — The Belgian Voice Who Turns Softness Into Strength

With gratitude to Théo 🚕 and France TV, whose instinct for beauty never misses.

🌟 A Gentle Thanks to Théo, the Taxi Driver With a Curator’s Ear

Some discoveries arrive by chance, others by recommendation, and then there are the rare ones that come from people who simply know. This article exists thanks to Théo, a taxi driver with impeccable taste, who spoke of Alice on the Roof with the warmth of someone introducing a friend. His enthusiasm was contagious, his instinct spot‑on, and even if logistics delayed the publication, the admiration remains intact. Théo, we love your energy, your generosity, and your way of carrying music like a gift you hand to strangers. This piece is for you — and for the artist you helped us rediscover.

🌫️ Alice on the Roof — A Voice That Floats Above the Noise

Born Alice Dutoit in Soignies in 1995, Alice on the Roof has become one of Belgium’s most distinctive musical signatures. Her voice — crystalline, airy, instantly recognisable — carries a softness that never collapses into fragility. She sings in both English and French, weaving between languages with the same fluidity she brings to emotion. Her artistic foundation is solid: eleven years of piano and choral training, a family shaped by architecture and engineering, and a formative year in Brookings, Oregon, where she refined her English and deepened her musical identity. Her stage name, a play on Dutoit (“du toit” meaning from the roof), captures her aesthetic perfectly: elevated, observant, gently detached from the noise below. Her early songs already revealed her singularity. Easy Come Easy Go, Mystery Light, Lucky You, and Malade each carried that unmistakable blend of melancholy and luminosity. Even a decade later, these tracks remain touchstones of her universe — fragile, floating, and quietly powerful.

🌱 A Career Built on Quiet Bravery

Alice first appeared on the public radar during The Voice Belgique, where she reached the semi‑finals. Her elimination didn’t slow her — it clarified her path. In 2015, she released Easy Come Easy Go, a song that became one of Belgium’s biggest hits of the year, reaching number one on the Ultratop and staying in the charts for thirty‑five weeks. Her debut album Higher confirmed her rise, earning her multiple awards and establishing her as a leading figure in Belgian pop. Her second album Madame deepened her artistic voice, blending introspection with a more mature emotional palette. By 2022, she had become a coach on The Voice Kids Belgique, returning again in 2025 — a sign of her influence on the next generation. Along the way, she built a visual universe that is unmistakably hers: calm, serene, pastel‑lit, and always infused with a gentle strangeness. In Miroir, miroir, she explores self‑reflection with a dreamlike softness. In Pourquoi on pleure, her collaboration with Albin de la Simone, she leans into emotional transparency with a visual language that feels like a quiet confession. Maman debout touches on resilience and maternal strength, while Broken strips everything back to essentials, letting her voice and emotional clarity take centre stage. Across all these works, Alice appears as she truly is: calm, composed, deeply human, and never afraid of silence.

🌅 “Change My World” — The Sound of a New Beginning

Her recent single, “Change My World”, marks a turning point. It is a song about transformation — not dramatic, not explosive, but quiet, deliberate, and deeply human. Alice doesn’t shout her evolution; she breathes it. The production is warm and organic, with soft synths that glow rather than shimmer, and a rhythm that feels like a heartbeat. Her voice is closer, more grounded, more assured. The song is not a plea; it is a decision. A quiet declaration that change begins from within, and that softness can be a form of courage. The official video, directed by Francis Courbin, extends the song’s emotional architecture into a visual language of pastel tones, fluid movement, and quiet symbolism. The work of PH Souquet behind the camera, the styling of Aurélie Campagne, the makeup of Garance Dufresne, and the presence of a trained animal handled by Manu Senra create a cinematic softness that deepens the song rather than illustrating it. It feels like watching someone rearrange their inner world in real time — a meditation on transformation, filmed with tenderness.

💗 “15 ans” — A Song That Touches the Wound With Grace

Among Alice’s recent work, one song stands apart for its emotional bravery: “15 ans”. It is a piece that speaks directly to the struggles of adolescence, the silent battles with body image, the invisible weight of eating disorders, and the long, painful journey toward self‑acceptance. Alice approaches the subject with extraordinary delicacy. There is no sensationalism, no dramatization — only truth, whispered with compassion. “15 ans” feels like a hand placed gently on the shoulder of anyone who has ever felt at war with their own reflection. The arrangement is minimal, almost fragile, allowing her voice to carry the emotional core without distraction. She sings with the clarity of someone who has seen these wounds up close — whether in herself or in others — and who understands that healing is not linear. The song resonates because it refuses to judge. It simply acknowledges. It listens. It offers space. For many listeners, “15 ans” becomes more than a song; it becomes a mirror. A reminder that the body is not an enemy, that adolescence leaves marks, and that growing up means learning to inhabit oneself with kindness. It is one of Alice’s most important works — perhaps her most necessary.

🌙 A Voice Built to Last

Alice on the Roof stands out because she embodies a rare combination in contemporary music: emotional honesty, artistic coherence, and the courage to speak softly about difficult things. Her work touches on themes that remain universal and timeless — self‑image, emotional struggle, the complexity of alimentation, the invisible battles of adolescence, and the long road toward self‑acceptance. These are not trends; they are human truths. Artists who dare to explore them with sincerity tend to endure. Her visual universe — calm, serene, pastel‑lit, and instantly recognisable — gives her a signature identity that sets her apart in a landscape often driven by noise and spectacle. She has built a world where vulnerability becomes a form of strength, where softness is not weakness but wisdom, and where introspection is treated with dignity rather than drama. This coherence, both sonic and visual, is the mark of artists who last. Alice’s longevity also lies in her ability to evolve without losing herself. From Easy Come Easy Go to Malade, from Miroir, miroir to Pourquoi on pleure, from Maman debout to Broken, and now with Change My World and 15 ans, she continues to deepen her voice, refine her message, and expand her emotional palette. She grows, but she never abandons the quiet intensity that makes her unique. In a world that often rewards volume over nuance, Alice on the Roof offers something different — a refuge, a mirror, a breath. Artists who create spaces rather than noise, who speak to the invisible battles people carry, and who do so with grace, tend to build careers that last far beyond a single moment. Alice is one of them. Her sincerity, her calm, her emotional clarity, and her unwavering artistic identity ensure that she will remain a luminous presence in the musical landscape for years to come.

#Softness 🌫️ #Calm 🌙 #Light ✨ #Truth 💗 #Becoming 🌱

Becoming Alice

✨ The Quiet Truth at the Heart of Her Art
In Alice on the Roof’s work, honesty never arrives as a spectacle; it moves quietly, like a soft light slipping under a closed door. Her truth is not confrontational but revealing, illuminating the corners of emotion we often avoid. She sings with a kind of transparent sincerity that doesn’t demand attention yet holds it effortlessly, as if vulnerability were a natural state rather than a risk. In her universe, telling the truth feels less like confession and more like breathing — a gentle act of presence, a way of existing without disguise. This is what makes her music resonate so deeply: she doesn’t try to impress with grand declarations; she simply names what is real, and in doing so, she gives listeners permission to face their own reflections with tenderness.

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