Sacha Got, guitarist of La Femme, appears over Zoom from his home in Biarritz, France, the low-key seaside resort town known for its vibrant surfing scene, and where Got met Marlon Magnée, the band’s keyboardist and vocalist, in secondary school. 

Got is almost unrecognizable to me as he’s dressed in a simple olive green T-shirt—a far cry from the glitzy, eclectic costumes the band wears in videos and concerts. “I don’t know if you remember, but in 2000, there was so many bands just playing on the roof with a T-shirt and jeans, you know?” says Magnée in a heavy French accent, joining in a few minutes later from the band’s studio. “When we arrived in 2010, we were a bit against this normalization of, like, the look…it was too much boring. That’s why we wanted to be, like, extra maximal…and, like, propose a whole universe, like cool hair, cool clothes—cooler direction, you know?” 

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(Credit: credit Sam Quealy)

When the two friends formed La Femme 14 years ago, they dedicated themselves to refining a sound blending soul, disco, electro, and rap. They moved to Paris and played bars and small clubs while working in the restaurant industry. After meeting some pro surfers from California who loved their music and encouraged them to come to the U.S., the pair booked gigs at a few small clubs in L.A., doing their own PR and building a small but loyal following. Then France’s music industry started to take notice. 

“I think the fact [that] in France, people saw us doing this, [they thought], ‘What is this band doing in U.S.?,’” says Got. “We just released the first EP, and then we had some hype… American blogs talking about us. It’s like the power of the American dream, I guess.”

La Femme’s DIY spirit, glitzy visual aesthetic, and retro style  has won them multiple gold records and Album Révélation of the Year at the French Victoires de la Musique awards.

La Femme’s second single “Clover Paradise,” is a rollicking, ‘80s-inspired synth-pop anthem about the dangers of excess, and a bold preview of the group’s upcoming sixth studio album, Rock Machine, due out October 11. 

What’s the meaning behind “Clover Paradise”?

MARLON:  The idea was to do like a shuffle rhythm, you know? I love this kind of rhythm with a big snare, ‘80s vibe. And I wanted to do a track like this. And after, I don’t know why, I had the idea of “Clover Paradise” in my head, and then I wrote about when people went too deep into drugs or too deep into spiritual things, and they can lose themselves because they are looking for the truth or other things. It’s a bit like a warning song…everyone can do their interpretation. 

It reminds me of the dangers of going too far in one direction or the other ideologically.

MARLON: It’s very interesting, like thinking that it’s the truth and, at the end, being blind, you know? it’s true with communism—it’s a very good ideology, but people will go too deep and you become fascist or totalitarian. 

(Credit: Laurent Chouard)

“Clover Paradise” has some pretty solid guitar work. 

MARLON: We called a guitarist from California called Josh Landau. He has a project called Stolen Nova. And he is basically a big shredder guitarist. He used to have a band called the Shrine. And it was really cool to bring back this kind of shredding guitar solo because we didn’t really see that kind of stuff in any record except like metal or art rock. So I think it’s really cool to bring back this kind of stuff because we all need more heat and more rock ‘n’ roll. 

And the same for the sax. In this song it was really hard to cut because the guitar solo is so good, and even the sax solo. So at the end I was like, we’re just going to put four minutes of solo in the whole song. So I think this is really dope because, at the end, you get transported by the music. It fits good in the song, and we really enjoy it. And for the sax player, he’s Patrick Bourgoin, a very, very famous sax player, and he did basically all the big records of the ‘80s and ‘70s.

On this song, it works so well. The sax… it’s like, whoa, you want more sax?

SACHA: Yeah, sometimes it takes time to enjoy some stuff. You need to be more mature, maybe to enjoy some sax and shit, you know? 

(Credit: credit Sam Quealy)

You’ve done five albums in 14 years, all in French. This is your first all-English record. Why now? 

MARLON: Well, in the last album we have a few songs in English. But basically by touring the world for 15 years—we went to L.A. the first time 15 years ago, and we had American girlfriends and stuff—we wrote so many English songs because sometimes when you write the song, it’s just the first word that comes to your mind. Is it going to be French or English? For example, “Clover Paradise,” this song came out in English in my spirit, you know? And I think it’s a good moment because now we are old enough—even if we have bad accents—we speak well. We can write good lyrics, and we can talk and have deep conversations in English. 

This album has a heavy synth-pop feel to it. What are your musical influences?

MARLON:  Velvet Underground. And also the Sex Pistols. But we also like the Brian Jonestown Massacre. And also we listen to a lot of French Cold Wave and French yeyé.

SACHA:  We also like the guitar song also—this kind of music and energy with reverb. We’ve got a Dick Dale sound too.

MARLON: You have some disco also in this album. 

SACHA: Yeah, it’s a great album. 

MARLON: Yeah, it’s a great album. 

La Femme will launch a 15-date North American tour starting November 7 in New York City.

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