There are projects that feel made for the first warm days of the year, and Lude & les métamorphoses is one of them. The Brussels-based indie-pop/electro-pop trio wraps intimate writing, queerness and surreal visuals into a sound that feels airy, bright and gently radiant — exactly the kind of fresh pop Ket loves for spring.

Originally built around a collaboration between Lude Vial and Zach Ruegg, the project later expanded with Felipe Moreno on drums and Valentin Perroud (Pylone) on production, allowing the songs to move from studio sketches into a live trio format with electronic backing. That evolution gives the project a shape that is both delicate and performative, somewhere between dream-pop, electro-pop and a small stage universe of its own.
A pop project with a symbolic layer
What makes Lude & les métamorphoses stand out is not just the sound, but the way it thinks about identity. The project draws on fairy tales, childhood imagery, pop culture symbols and questions of gender, using those references to reframe them rather than simply quote them. That gives the music a soft surface and a deeper conceptual undercurrent, where intimacy and queerness are part of the same visual and sonic world.
The official project description also emphasizes sensuality, intimate lyrics and a surreal visual universe, which is exactly the kind of combination that can turn a simple pop song into a mood. It is pop that feels designed not only to be heard, but to be inhabited.
Why it works so well in spring
Some music just clicks when the weather changes, and this is one of those cases. The electronic shimmer, the lightness of the arrangements and the emotional clarity of the writing all make Lude & les métamorphoses feel like a soundtrack for longer days and open windows.
That freshness is not accidental. The band’s live setup, with battery, bass, clavier-voix and electronic layers, suggests a project that values both melody and atmosphere, and knows how to balance vulnerability with movement. In other words: it is thoughtful pop that still knows how to breathe.

A project to keep close
Lude & les métamorphoses has already been circulating through the French-speaking live circuit, including attention from FrancoFaune 2026. That makes sense for a project that sits comfortably between emerging artist energy and a much more distinct, visually coherent identity.
For Ket, the appeal is obvious: this is queer-tinged, visually strong, emotionally open pop with just enough weirdness to make it interesting. It feels contemporary without chasing trends, and that balance is rare.
Useful links
Lude & les métamorphoses on YouTube
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