Finis Les is Alonzo’s rallying cry from the heart of Marseille, a track that stomps in with street-hardened confidence and a hurricane of family, friends, and hometown voices yelling one thing: “Finis-les !” – Finish them! From the first line, the rapper reminds haters he has been around “depuis Luciano,” stamping his veteran status on the French scene. Surrounded by childhood buddies, phone calls from Baumettes prison, and even bedtime whispers from his wife and kids, Alonzo is pushed to out-rap, out-earn, and out-fight every rival who doubts him.
Behind the braggadocio lies an inner tug-of-war. He’s made serious money (“des sous dans l’rap”) yet wonders if he keeps rapping for love or for the thrill of crushing opponents. Alonzo owns his “dégaine de délinquant,” pledges to protect his mother, and crowns himself Capi Dei Capo – the boss of all bosses. The song is both a chest-puffed anthem and a reflection on loyalty, ambition, and the pressure to stay ruthless when everyone you love chants the same refrain: finish them, never stop.