Mes Aïeux’s folk hit paints a rapid-fire family portrait, tracing six generations to show how values, work, and dreams keep mutating. We start with hardy ancestors who cleared forests, farmed, and raised huge families; move to modern parents who traded fields for office jobs and investments; and land with today’s young adults stuck in overpriced apartments, unsure of their place, juggling fleeting relationships, and craving something real. Each verse contrasts past grit and community spirit with present-day consumer pressures and rootlessness, mixing humor and sting to ask: Have we lost more than we gained?
Yet the chorus flips the mood. After listing everything that has “degenerated,” the singer reminds us that celebration and music still survive. The final invitation—put on your best clothes and come dance—suggests we can reconnect with our roots, each other, and a simpler joy. It is both a social critique and a pep talk wrapped in a catchy, foot-stomping tune.