Madeon’s new album Victory feels like the sound of someone catching himself mid-transformation and deciding to document it before the mask slips. Born out of heartbreak and the strange performance that can follow it. This third studio album leans into a sharper, more volatile version of Madeon than people may have expected. One far less interested in comfort and much more willing to let things snap in two.
He opens the album with “Hi!,” and from that first track it is obvious he is not easing into anything. The song is packed with punk-rock jet fuel and all the nervous energy of someone kicking the door in instead of knocking. “Dancing On Your Grave” swings a little more pop, but the textures in the vocal keep it feeling warped in a way that is hard to shake.
“Red Jacket” sits somewhere between those two worlds, and that tension is a big part of what makes Victory so strong. The album keeps pushing into rougher, less predictable territory, pulling from electro, pop, and punk without ever sounding like it is borrowing someone else’s language. It feels intentional, self-aware, and completely alive. You can hear Madeon testing the outer edges of what his music can hold.
The visual side deserves just as much credit. From the music videos to the fashion-forward imagery around the rollout, everything about this era feels refreshingly deliberate and creatively fearless.
More than anything, Victory makes Madeon feel exciting in a new way. Not because he walked away from what made people care, but because he is clearly refusing to repeat himself. In 2026 and beyond, that unpredictability might be the most compelling thing about him.
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