Sur le Moment feels like a spontaneous shout of rebellion wrapped in gritty poetry. The singer refuses to “build on fear” and chooses to navigate life in the moment, whistling a carefree tune while chaos smolders in the background. Rotting fruit, frayed socks, forgotten ailments – these strange images paint a world that is already burnt out, yet the narrator decides to laugh, whistle, and keep moving. It is a call to drop our emotional baggage, leave our “cancers” and anxieties behind, and face whatever comes with a stubborn grin.
Beneath the playful tone, Déportivo hints at social decay and personal burnout, but he flips the script by celebrating the possibility of change. The repeated cry of “Allez, allez!” pushes us forward: throw off your fears, step out of the wreckage, and dance to an old tune of renewal. The song suggests that even when everything around us feels spoiled, we can still claim the present moment, rebel against despair, and choose joy instead.