Here’s a write-up for the song — structured as a short artist/label pitch or review. Artist: Desirs noirs Title: Belle comme le diable Genre: Post-Punk / Darkwave / Coldwave
Vocally, the performance is detached yet urgent, whispered and then echoed, as if sung from the bottom of a well or through a cracked mirror. The lyrics play with duality: beauty as danger, temptation as damnation. The title phrase — “Belle comme le diable” — isn’t just a compliment; it’s a warning. The devil, after all, was once an angel.
“Belle comme le diable” (Beautiful as the Devil) is the kind of track that slithers out of the shadows and refuses to leave your head. Desirs noirs — a name that translates to dark desires — deliver a hypnotic, bass-driven coldwave gem that balances raw minimalism with gothic grandeur.
For fans of: Lebanon Hanover, She Past Away, Molchat Doma, Selofan.
“Ton sourire est un piège / doux comme un couteau” (Your smile is a trap / soft as a knife)
Belle comme le diable is a slow-burning earworm — dangerous, elegant, and impossible to forget. Desirs noirs proves that sometimes the most powerful weapon in darkwave is simplicity done perfectly.
Where many modern post-punk acts aim for polished nostalgia, Desirs noirs keeps the edges sharp and the production raw. There’s a lo-fi warmth beneath the frost, reminiscent of early Cure, Asylum Party, or even the darker corners of French coldwave from the 80s — yet it feels entirely contemporary in its restraint and mood.
From the first ominous note, the song establishes a nocturnal atmosphere. A repetitive, pulsating bassline anchors the track, while reverb-drenched, angular guitar phrases weave in and out like headlights on a deserted midnight highway. The drum machine keeps a merciless, steady pulse — cold, mechanical, yet strangely danceable.