Non-album tracks, compilations, and special releases
Gojira's Mario Duplantier Says New Album is Almost Done Will Have a Gojira Discography
Clone , Love , Space Time Sound Profile: Raw, angular, and furious. The production is brittle, but the energy is volcanic. Mario’s kick-drum work on Clone is legendary; he plays patterns that sound like a drum machine malfunctioning in the best way possible. Lyrically, Joe introduces themes of existentialism and manipulation ( Lizard Skin ). While not as polished as later works, Terra Incognita remains a cult classic—a statement that this band would not be confined to traditional verse-chorus structures. Released during the COVID-19 pandemic, it is an
Building on the melodic experimentation of Magma but re-injecting the groove of L’Enfant Sauvage , Fortitude is Gojira’s victory lap. Released during the COVID-19 pandemic, it is an album about resilience, hope, and protesting against apathy. The title track’s mantra—"Fortitude, hold on"—became an accidental anthem for a locked-down world. the story of
Through over two decades of relentless creativity, Gojira's discography stands as one of the most consistent and influential bodies of work in modern heavy metal. They evolved from local French death metal innovators into global icons, never compromising their integrity, their musicianship, or their message. Each album is a chapter in a grand, ongoing saga of sound and spirit, proving that music can indeed be a force to move mountains and change the world.
Four years later, in 2003, they followed up with The Link. This sophomore effort saw the band refining their chaos. The production became clearer, the grooves deeper, and the heavy riffs more hypnotic. The Link was a bridge between their brutal beginnings and the atmospheric, progressive path they were destined to walk. Tracks like "Remembrance" and "Indians" proved that Gojira could be devastatingly heavy while maintaining a sense of groove and spiritual depth. They were beginning to forge a unique identity, one that combined the technical savagery of Morbid Angel with a deeply philosophical and ecological worldview.
From a cabin in the woods of Bayonne to the global stage of the Olympics, the story of