Beaux Rêves plunges us into a restless night where Loïc Nottet and Prinzly battle the "demons" banging at their door. Those demons are not monsters with horns but the nagging doubts, anxious thoughts, and guilty memories that keep us wide-eyed at 3 a.m. Every time the singers try to relax, intrusive voices start whispering, then shouting, snatching away any hope of “beautiful dreams.” The neon-lit streets, the moon hanging high, and the fog-filled soundtrack all paint a picture of insomnia that feels both cinematic and very real.
Yet the song is more than a complaint about sleeplessness. By naming their fears and daring to face them, the artists hint at a quiet courage: tonight might be the showdown with their derniers démons (last demons). The hypnotic beat mirrors the cycle of worry, but the fierce vocals suggest determination to break it. In just a few minutes, Beaux Rêves turns a universal struggle—lying awake with swirling thoughts—into an electrifying anthem about confronting the darkness and reclaiming the night for brighter dreams.