Like a breeze from Montreal drifting through the noise of New York streets… When Rosier took the stage at the 2025 New Colossus Festival, the city's heartbeat slowed for a few precious minutes. This five-piece band weaved warmth and northern cool into a single thread, their songs flowing seamlessly between English and French.
Tradition Breeds Tomorrow
Rosier’s music grows from the earthy roots of folk — but those roots now crack through pavement and bloom on festival stages. The melancholy in their violin meets the tender glow of indie tones: both familiar and refreshingly new. The band's female vocals — delicate yet unbreakable like a silver string — add both grace and strength to every note.
Bilingual, But One Spirit
For Rosier, singing in two languages doesn’t mean speaking to two separate souls — it’s telling one story through different accents. Their French songs flow like poetry, while the English ones echo like introspective monologues. Listening feels like leaning against a train window: the world passes by outside, but inside, time stands still.
Rosier carries the voice of the past straight into the heart of the present. Their songs aren’t just heard — they’re felt, followed, and sometimes whispered like the final verse of a lullaby. If you’re drawn to the deeper, more tender side of the indie scene, this band is already there — like a story you’ve known forever, or a fairy tale you’ve yet to hear.

