Punk
La Ville en Colère
French punk about rent, empty promises, sleepless transport, and neighborhood anger. It is direct, dry, and more useful when it stays close to the street.
- Tracks 14
- Length 41 min
Liner Notes
A short editorial read on the album world, sound, and standout moments.
About the Album
La Ville en Colère is a city record with very little patience for poetic distance. Its anger comes from rent, transport, broken promises, and the fatigue of people asked to keep functioning while the city prices them out.
The punk sound is dry and direct, which suits the writing. “Béton Gris” and “Les Loyers Montent” do not need elaborate metaphor. “Métro Sans Sommeil” is especially effective because exhaustion is political here: the body becomes the place where policy, wages, and urban planning meet.
The album is strongest when it names pressure without turning it into a slogan. Fast guitars, blunt bass, and shouted vocals give the songs force, but the real bite is in the details of daily life. La Ville en Colère is not a fantasy of revolt. It is the sound of a neighborhood running out of ways to be polite.
Production Notes
All tracks were generated with AI music models, then processed for the final sound. No human performance recordings are used.