If electronic music has a "trickster god," it is Quentin Dupieux, better known as . While the world at large remembers him for the fuzzy yellow puppet Flat Eric and the 1999 hit "Flat Beat," those who have spent time in the trenches of the Ed Banger Records catalog know that his 2008 album Lambs Anger is where the real madness lies. At the heart of that madness is "Positif."
What makes "Positif" deep isn't just the lyrics; it’s the . In the mid-2000s, French Touch 2.0 (Justice, SebastiAn) was all about "maximalism"—big distorted bass and cinematic energy. Oizo went the other way. He made music that sounded "wrong." Mr. Oizo - Positif (Official Audio)
Years later, "Positif" remains a high-water mark for the "weird" side of electronic music. It paved the way for the hyperpop and "deconstructed club" movements of today. It taught a generation of producers that you don't need a beautiful melody to make a classic; sometimes, all you need is a distorted loop, a grim reminder of death, and the will to keep dancing anyway. It’s ugly, it’s repetitive, and it’s brilliant. If electronic music has a "trickster god," it
Oizo suggests that because life is inherently nonsensical and we are indeed "just animals," the only logical response is to embrace the absurdity. Soyez positifs isn’t a Hallmark card sentiment; it’s a defiant shout into the void. It’s the musical equivalent of laughing at a funeral because the situation is simply too heavy to handle any other way. The Legacy In the mid-2000s, French Touch 2
In the context of the music video (featuring a puppet-like creature "playing" a steak like a record), "Positif" becomes a surrealist manifesto. It aligns with the philosophy of —the science of imaginary solutions.
The drums are mixed too loudly, the loops cut off at awkward intervals, and the structure defies traditional tension and release. By intentionally breaking the rules of "good" production, Oizo forces the listener to engage. You can’t just background-listen to "Positif"; its jagged edges demand your attention. The Philosophy of the Absurd