Montreal’s Charlotte Cardin shifts between genre and mood with the ease and agility of an artist accustomed to thinking in multiple languages simultaneously. The bilingual performer became a household name (at least amongst francophones) in 2013, at the age of 18, after reaching the finals in the Québécois version of The Voice. She quickly established her bona fides as a singer and songwriter equally at home with trip-hop-infused grooves (“Big Boy”), nouveau-Piaf ballads (“Les Échardes”) and swaggering dance pop (“Main Girl”). Since releasing her solo debut in 2016, Cardin has honed her aesthetic and sharpened her hooks—the feathery, catchy chorus of “Daddy” is a particularly addictive earworm.