Coupé-décalé () is a type of popular dance music originating in Côte d'Ivoire. Drawing heavily from zouglou and ndombolo with African influences, coupé-décalé is a very percussive style, featuring African samples, deep bass, and repetitive minimalist arrangements.
Coupé-décalé () is a type of popular dance music originating in Côte d'Ivoire. Drawing heavily from zouglou and ndombolo with African influences, coupé-décalé is a very percussive style, featuring African samples, deep bass, and repetitive minimalist arrangements.
The genre was developed around 2001 by a group of young Ivorian club promoters and performers known as the Jet Set, led by Douk Saga. These performers, referred to as atalakus (hype men), gained recognition for their flamboyant performances, ostentatious fashion, and theatrical displays of wealth. The movement popularized Nouchi slang terms such as farot farot (to flaunt wealth) and travaillement (lavish distribution of cash), drawing inspiration from Congolese sapeur subculture. The terms "coupé" ("to cheat") and "décalé" ("to run away") were introduced by DJ Jacob in reference to the music and the accompanying dance styles, although Douk Saga is credited with creating and globalizing the concept, particularly with the 2003 hit "Sagacité".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).