Gims and Vianney unite their very different voices in La Même to create a fearless anthem of individuality. The Congolese-French rapper and the French singer admit they are “un pêle-mêle, un mélange” – a jumbled mix of influences, tastes and contradictions. Instead of squeezing themselves into tidy little boxes, they zigzag through life, shaking hands with everyone, loving both Jacques Brel and American R&B, and wearing dark glasses so no one can guess their next move. The catchy hook “Si je vous gêne, bah c’est la même” roughly means “If I bother you, tough luck – it’s all the same to me,” and it turns the song into a playful shrug at anyone who tries to judge or categorize them.
At its heart, the track is a celebration of freedom. The lyrics insist that envy comes before opinions and that true liberty enters your life when you stop worrying about what others think. By blending rap, pop and Afro-inspired rhythms, La Même doesn’t just preach openness – it sounds like it. The result is an uplifting reminder that every human is made of “mille boîtes” – a thousand little boxes – and none of them can ever be big enough to hold our full, complicated selves.