It doesn’t happen often, but it really is: André Hazes Jr. receives support from Yvonne Coldeweijer. She thinks that his former lyricist Bram Koning is very weepy-weepy.
André Hazes jr. is good for countless riots every year. Last week alone there were two: one about the leaked letter to his ex and one about his angry copywriters. That last riot revolves around an old gentleman who was André’s copywriter for years, but has now been put in the rubbish bin for the second time: Bram Koning (photo: André’s left).
Angry copywriter
André’s repertoire is not exactly overflowing with hits and that is why the folk singer wants to take a different tack. He has now selected a new team, but has not properly said goodbye to his old team, a bit that all his exes always complain about. And now Bram is angry.
Bram grumbled last week The Telegraph that André ‘is currently being influenced by the wrong people, who don’t really know him’. “That makes me afraid that things will go wrong for him again. I want so much to save him from that. It’s just not possible the way it is now. (…) We were gabbers, that’s not how you treat friends.”
Yvonne responds
Yvonne Coldeweijer finds it very sad that this Bram is trying to get his gram through the newspaper. “An interview with André’s former songwriter. He is supposedly worried about him, but is only disappointed that the money tap is turned off. It’s a shame to give an interview about this.”
André wants a slightly less elderly team, because he wants to sound more like Antoon and Kriss Kross Amsterdam. A bad choice, says Bram. “If he starts working with those young guys again, I’ll hold my breath.”
Poisonous with jealousy
What a weak argument, Yvonne thinks. “Toxic with jealousy. André apparently wants to try something more modern. Like he owes you something ?. Sorry, but I thought these guys in the documentary also came across as stingy!”
Bram now slams the door half shut himself: “I don’t know if it’s still possible to work together. But if he ever has the courage to call, we’ll see.”
Don’t count on it, says Yvonne: “Mark my words: after this interview, he will certainly never call you again.”
Immature
Evert Santegoeds, the editor-in-chief of Privé (a kind of Life of Yvonne for old people), is in camp Bram. “It is very disappointing that André simply runs away from the responsibility to say goodbye to the elderly if you do something else.”
“Of course it’s another immature behavior, while he should have learned from the last time.”