Saccagé is a powerful verb meaning 'to have ransacked' or 'wrecked'. It conjures up a vivid image of complete and violent destruction, like a room that has been torn apart.
In this song, the singer uses it metaphorically to express ultimate betrayal, singing "T'as saccagé tout c'qu'on a battu" (You've wrecked everything we built). This isn't just a breakup; it's the total devastation of their shared history, making this a very dramatic and memorable word to learn.
“Entre Nous C’est Mort” is GIMS’s fiery break-up anthem where every beat stamps a clear message: this romance is finished, full stop. Switching playfully between French and the Spanish word muerte, the Congolese-French star paints the picture of a lover who has finally reached her limit. She lists the partner’s betrayals—from ogling her friends to ruining everything they built—then slams the door with a chorus that repeats like a verdict: “Between us, it’s dead.” The song mixes sharp humor, raw frustration, and a hint of swagger, turning heartbreak into an empowering declaration of independence.
Listen closely and you will feel the narrator’s relief as much as her rage. She refuses to rewind the clock or look for pretty words; instead, she claims her dignity and walks out “with class,” leaving the unfaithful partner to his own regrets. Behind the catchy hook lies a universal lesson: self-respect wins the day, and sometimes the healthiest love story is the one you end.
GIMS, born Gandhi Djuna in 1986 in Kinshasa, is one of the biggest stars in French music. His family left the Democratic Republic of the Congo for Paris when he was just two years old, and he grew up in the French capital.
He first made his name as the masked frontman of the rap collective Sexion d'Assaut, one of the groups behind France's rap revival around 2010. Since going solo in 2013 he has become a chart-topping, stadium-filling artist who blends rap, pop and R&B, and he has worked with international names like Sia, Sting, Maluma and Pitbull.