Objective: this guide helps to sing the song made famous by Joe Dassin with regular phrasing, clear diction and comfortable placement so as not to tire.
The piece is deceptive: calm tempo but long sentences, numerous connections and surges of emotion that make you want to strain your voice.
We work on two practical axes: phrasing/breathing — where to catch your breath and how to sustain the legato — and placement/support — how to sound “crooner” without tightening your throat.
The advice will be illustrated with targeted passages, for example attacks on “dis-moi…”, stretched lines such as “sans toi” and the final phrase “pour te créer”. The plan follows: preparation (format, key, tempo), line-by-line phrasing, placement and interpretation, then rehearsal routine.
Practical framework: aim for a fair and stable performance, not a perfect imitation, by adapting tone and tempo to your range.
Preparing your “Et si tu n’existais pas” karaoke: lyrics, tone and support
The song requires more breath control than force. It was made famous by Joe Dassin and is structured in repeated verses, with vocal interludes (“Mmm…”, according to versions sometimes “Hou hou…”).
Spot the trap phrases now: dis-moi pourquoi / moi pourquoi j’existerais are sung in a single flowing line. The rest “to hang out in a world without you, without hope and without regret” combines length and consonants: read it aloud to prepare the connections.
Choose a suitable format: CDG (MP3+G) offers the best compatibility, MP4 is practical if you want a ready video, and KFN (KaraFun) allows you to adjust chorus, vocal guide, tempo and tone.
- Test 2 transpositions (-1, -2) to avoid attacking high notes.
- At first, activate the voice guide; then reduce it to find your phrasing.
- Slow down the learning tempo slightly, then return to 100%.
For additional resources, see score and notes.
Karaoke “Et si tu n’existais pas”: phrasing and vocal placement
A calm start secures intonation. Work on the attack on “Et si tu n’existais pas, dis-moi pourquoi j’existerais” by first speaking the phrase, then singing it. This way, you keep the consonants clear and avoid rushing “tell me”.
Breathing & legato: plan a breather before “To hang out in a world without you, without hope and without regrets”. Support the legato and articulate the “sans…sans…” repetitions without cutting the line.
Take care of the connections on “tell me for whom I would exist”. Keep your jaw flexible. Attack the vowels to maintain clarity and swing.
For the climb “I would only be one more point… I would feel lost”, play on color and respiratory support, not on volume. Stabilize the flow on “tell me how I would exist…pretend to be me” by asking each group of words.
Properly extend the endings to “The secret of life, the why… simply to create yourself”. For “Mmm…” and “Hoo hoo…”, choose a gentle vibration and moderate support.

| Passage | Objective | Exercise |
|---|---|---|
| And if you didn’t exist… tell me | Calm start, clear consonants | Speak then sing, 4 repetitions |
| To hang around… without hope | Planned breathing, legato | Breathe first, sing quietly |
| I’ll just be one more point | Emotional color, maintenance | Ride stamp, keep support |
| Mmm… / Woo hoo… | Effortlessly held | Gentle vibration, 6 outfits |
Voice placement and interpretation: making the song sound without fatigue
Place the resonance forward to protect the throat when emotion rises. The mask should give a calm voice sensation, with frontal resonance and relaxed neck.
Find the right support point
Feel the vibration before your eyes helps achieve a “crooner” tone without tightening. If the ends of phrases become tight or the vibrato gets stuck, return to a lighter attack and refocus the vowel.
Support and dynamic progression
On “I would try to invent love…”, keep the intensity contained at the start. Open gradually on the image of the painter.
For “like a painter who sees the colors of the day born under his fingers”, keep the legato and lightly mark the key words: painter, fingers, colors, day.
Tone, tempo and quick test
Exercise: sing the phrase at 70% while maintaining the sensation of carried breath, then go back to 85–90% without changing the placement.
If the voice becomes tired or the pitch drops at the end of a phrase, go down a semitone or slow down the tempo slightly. A KaraFun setting on tone and voice guide helps validate this choice.
| Objective | Indicator | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Frontal placement | Vibration mask | Light attack, focused vowel |
| Support | Stable end of sentence | Exercise 70% → 90% |
| Accuracy | No fall at the end | Lower pitch / slow down tempo |
Conclusion
In short, remember three steps that make singing and expression safer. ,
1) Prepare support, key, tempo. 2) Secure phrasing: attacks, connections, endings. 3) Stabilize the placement to sing without fatigue.
Before a performance, review these cues: “dis-moi”, the long line “monde sans toi… sans espoir…”, the rise “un point de plus… perdu” and the conclusion “secret de la vie… pour te créer”.
Quick routine (10 minutes): gentle warm-up, rhythmic reading of the text, then a passage in half voice to check breathing and diction. In the evening, start with the voice guide if necessary, then remove it as soon as the flow is established.
For a visual reminder and key landmarks, check out this resource. Aim for an ending with a fresh voice, crisp words, and “Mmm…” held without tension.