Chou Wasabi feels like biting into something sweet then suddenly discovering a burst of wasabi heat. Julien Doré and Micky Green trade French and English lines to paint a love story that has gone from tender to toxic. The playful title mixes chou (cabbage or “sweetheart” in French slang) with the zing of wasabi, hinting at a relationship that once tasted gentle but now stings. Over dreamy guitars and a hypnotic beat, the singers confess, “Baby I love you less and less,” while recalling fiery nights in Spain, burning memories of Paris, and the wild urge to run free. Their imagery jumps from crimson geese to lurking vipers, showing how beautiful moments can quickly turn dangerous when trust fades.
Yet beneath the bitterness, a fragile hope lingers: each voice pleads, “Baby just don’t let me go.” The song captures that messy in-between stage of a breakup where lovers swing from heartbreak to longing, from letting go to clutching at every memory. In the end, they sigh “C’est la vie,” accepting that life rolls on, love reshapes itself, and you may have to start all over again ‑ even with tears still on your cheeks and wasabi on your tongue.