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Who are viral math rock duo Angine de Poitrine – and is the hype justified?

Who are viral math rock duo Angine de Poitrine – and is the hype justified?
Who are viral math rock duo Angine de Poitrine – and is the hype justified? Copyright  Constantin Monfilliette
Copyright Constantin Monfilliette
By David Mouriquand
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Angine de Poitrine have conquered the internet in a matter of weeks with their alien polka-dotted get-up and experimental math rock. Their recent YouTube video made them a viral sensation. Another here-today-gone-tomorrow act? Or are they the real deal?

Angine de Poitrine are inescapable right now.

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They’re a Canadian duo who have been catapulted to viral success after a KEXP session recorded at the 48th edition of the Trans Musicales festival in Rennes, France.

Everyone was struck by their visual aesthetic and the sonic carnival on show - two clearly talented musicians wearing oversized papier-mâché masks and polka-dotted costumes, jamming to dissonant rock.

One has long noodly hair, a Pinocchio nose,plays a double-necked guitar, and looks like they’ve been struck from above by an inverted white pyramid. The other appears to be the bastard lovechild of a dalmatian and the Black Knight from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

Their February performance went stratospheric, with millions of YouTube views. The Angine phenomenon had begun to spread across continents, leading their scheduled UK and EU tour dates this Autumn to sell out.

Overnight success comes with speculation... and the band don’t give much away.

What we know for sure is that Angine de Poitrine are from Quebec and formed in 2019 as a joke. They use the pseudonyms Klek de Poitrine (the knight on drums) and Khn de Poitrine (the guitar and bass prodigy). Their first album, ‘Vol.1’ was released in 2024; their self-released ‘Vol.II’ just dropped at the beginning of April. They label themselves as “space-time voyagers” who form a “mantra-rock, Dadaist, Pythagorean-Cubist orchestra”.

Now, there’s a niche.

Incidentally, ‘Angine de Poitrine’ literally translates to ‘angina of the chest’, and if you are experiencing some really painful chest pain caused by insufficient blood flow to the heart muscle, treat it with the seriousness it deserves. Rest up and seek professional help. Your doctor should prescribe you some nitroglycerin for the symptoms.

Don’t say we’re not looking out.

Angine de Poitrine
Angine de Poitrine KEXP YouTube screenshot

It wouldn’t be too hard to eye-roll yourself into a coma with these two, initially dismissing them as another flash in the pan, goût du jour act coasting on their kooky gimmicks – a brush-off further warranted by the fact they make triangle gestures to communicate and their song titles are just as odd as their outfits.

Case and point: ‘Mata Zyklek’, ‘Sarniezz’ and ‘Utzp’ all feature on their sophomore album.

Your guess is as good as ours.

They’re not the first band to lean into theatricality and lore-creation for the sake of cultivating mystery. From Kiss to Daft Punk via Slipknot, the mask-and-makeup schtick isn’t all that new.

However, the music can’t be shrugged off.

Their songs are largely instrumental compositions, a form of math rock which boasts layered loops, strange time signatures, funky grooves, some Middle Eastern influences, and enough verve to make King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard devotees stand to attention like roused meerkats.

More than that, it’s fun.

If you needed a Rock God seal of approval, it came courtesy of Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl, who has been won over by the off-kilter charms of Angine de Poitrine, describing them as “completely bonkers”.

Speaking to Logan on the podcast Logan Sounds Off, Grohl was full of praise for Angine, whipping out his smartphone at one point to share a video of the duo.

“It was sent to me yesterday by a friend and it absolutely blew my fucking mind.”

High praise indeed.

Cover for Angine de Poitrine's second album 'Vol.II'
Cover for Angine de Poitrine's second album 'Vol.II' Bandcamp

So, is the hype justified?

Yes. To a point. The band’s most recent release, ‘Vol. II’, is composed of six tracks that don’t reinvent the microtonal wheel. Nor does the band outshine their genre neighbours. That said, it’s a deliriously entertaining listen and let’s not forget it’s only album N°2. They’ve got time.

What makes Angine de Poitrine a fascinating viral phenomenon is context.

Considering Dadaism – an open influence for the band – was born as a response to war and the crushing weight of modern life, this updated version could be heard and seen to be the same. While it would be a smidge too brazen to state that Angine de Poitrine are the antidote to our very troubled times or a remedy for the rise of crushingly shit AI-generated music, there’s much comfort to be found in their popularity among new generations of listeners who seem to be forgoing sanitised alternatives.

We’re looking at you, current chart-toppers Ella Langley, BTS, Alex Warren, Luke Combs...

(Olivia Dean, if you’re reading, you keep going – we're loving what 2026 is doing to you and your chart positions so far.)

If Angine de Poitrine stay the course and continue their dominance, it’s something to be celebrated. Weird is good. Moreover, if they lead their listeners to recognise the value of human creativity compared to ubiquitous AI slop, even better.

As one listener put it in the YouTube comments for their viral KEXP performance: “AI: Humans are done with music – Angine de Poitrine: Hold my triangular Martian beer.”

And if Angine de Poitrine become a gateway band for some listeners to venture into more experimental genres and artists (Captain Beefheart and King Crimson spring to mind), all we can say say is: Get your freak on, and Vive l’Angine!

Angine de Poitrine’s ‘Vol.II’ is out now.

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