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ODA Louise and Camporeale release ‘Pas Besoin De Tricher’ blending French pop and drum and bass

A man in a suit and a woman in a lace outfit walk up dark stairs. The setting is dimly lit with blue tones, creating a moody ambiance.
ODA Louise and Camporeale

This one moves fast, but it doesn’t lose its focus.


‘Pas Besoin De Tricher’ from ODA Louise and Camporeale sits right on that line between emotional songwriting and full club intensity. It pulls from French pop, but the framework is firmly drum and bass.


The pace sets the tone straight away. Rapid rhythms and deep basslines drive the track forward, while glitchy textures flicker in and out of the mix. It feels urgent, but controlled. Everything is moving, but nothing feels out of place.



The vocal is what anchors it. Direct, clear and intentional, it cuts through the production without being swallowed by it. The themes land hard as well. There’s no ambiguity in the writing. It deals with toxic relationships and power dynamics in a way that feels immediate rather than abstract.


That contrast is where the track works best. The emotional weight sits on top of a fast, physical rhythm. You’re pulled into the narrative, but your body is still locked into the groove.


We’ve found this one hits strongest when the energy is already high. It doesn’t build the room, it drives it forward. The kind of track that shifts things up a gear without losing emotional depth.



There’s a clear identity here. Camporeale’s production stays sharp and purposeful, while ODA Louise brings a vocal that feels grounded and real.


‘Pas Besoin De Tricher’ doesn’t sit in one lane. It moves between them, and that’s exactly what makes it stick.


ODA Louise


Camporeale

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