Summer strikes early this year, as Lupus J.’s return brings a passionate dancehall anthem of optimism, colour and soul.
Dance Pop
Imagine something like electro-pop, with an experimental edge of creative composition; and a profound lyrical core.
Dystopia leads with a timeless sense of presence and calm, which permits these various musings and moods the time and space to connect – or to provide the ideal soundtrack as you get on with what needs to be done
Softly euphoric synths meet with an equally gentle, breathy vocal melody that’s instantly alluring – Iman Flow captures a style between styles, for the exotic Carta.
Nostalgic dance-pop flavours and an unmistakable vocal identity guide us into this melodic and thought-provoking single from Joseph Rutakangwa.
In being so art-pop expressive, the song is naturally catchy yet also fresh – original in a few different ways, and memorable for its authenticity and dance-ready energy alike.
Exotic dance vibes bring tropical flavours together with intimate, almost whispered vocals, as Yvette Lopez enchants and engages, for Rompe Me.
A nostalgic yet fresh mix, tipping its hat to the dance-pop familiarity of eras past, but also shining light on the freedom of creativity that is the future of music.
Classic pop qualities return for the poetic and aptly-magical new single from an ever-colourful Alex Woburn.
Lupus. J packs an almighty punch with the brilliantly evolving, emotive and poetic yet ultimately powerful single The Voice.
The UK’s own and stylishly uniting a passion for the current and nostalgic dance-pop sounds alike – Beatzo delivers an uplifting anthem of both heartfelt intentions and skilful design.
During the latter half we get to appreciate the reverb-soaked, atmospheric presentation of a dreamy guitar loop, and a touch of Caban’s own affinity with afrobeats, modern rap and world music flavours.