Jordy's performance abilities impressed executives at Columbia Records, which released Jordy's debut single, Dur Dur D'Être Bébé, in 1992. It rocketed to the top of the French charts and sold over two million copies on its way to becoming a hit across Europe and Japan. The album Pochette Surprise (Surprise Package) followed on its heels, and it too sold well, despite a bit of padding with remixes. Released in the U.S., Dur Dur D'Être Bébé didn't fare quite as well, but it did manage to chart, topping out at number 58. Jordy spent parts of 1993-1994 in the U.S., recording some of the material that became his second album, Potion Magique. Released in 1994, it was heavy on Christmas material, including his title song for the French film #Allo Maman, C'est Noël.
However, reports were beginning to surface that suggested a lapse in parental responsibilities; amid some more disturbing allegations, the French government -- concerned that Jordy was simply being exploited for commercial gain -- stepped in and banned his music from radio and television for his own good. Under the ban, his third album, La Récréation, sank without a trace. In 1996, his parents opened a children's tourist attraction called La Ferme de Jordy (Jordy's Farm). It was an unmitigated financial failure, and when it closed down, Jordy's parents divorced. Jordy was legally emancipated and spent the remainder of his teen years living on a farm near Caen, where he studied dance and drumming; he also developed a fondness for techno, and was rumored to be attempting an acting career. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi