DJ Momotaro – Play Me Like a Hit
A Neon Pulse Reborn
DJ Momotaro’s “Play Me Like a Hit (feat. La Fiamma) [Radio Edit]” doesn’t just nod to the Eurodance era—it practically sprints back into the ’90s, grabs the genre by the hand, and whirls it straight into 2025 with a grin. This track is a rush of bold synths, crisp digital polish, and a kind of kinetic energy you can feel in your chest, like the thump of a club floor at peak hour. It’s nostalgic, yes—but never stuck in the past.
Momotaro clearly understands what made mid-90s Eurodance so addictive: immediacy, clarity, and that delicious sense of momentum. The production leans into those roots with bright, assertive leads and a rhythm structure that could wake a sleeping city. But what makes the track truly hit its stride is La Fiamma. Her vocal performance is vivid and alive, bringing emotional intensity without ever weighing the song down. Even her breath becomes part of the heartbeat of the track, a clever artistic choice that adds tension and movement in all the right places.
Despite the entire collaboration happening digitally, the finished piece feels surprisingly intimate—almost physical. It’s the kind of song that makes you want to put everything else aside and just move, letting the beat push you forward.
“Play Me Like a Hit” manages that rare trick of honoring a beloved era while sounding fully contemporary. It’s vibrant, punchy, and irresistibly danceable—exactly the kind of modern Eurodance revival the genre has been waiting for.
Exceptional Failures – Givin’ it all Away
A Soft Reckoning Wrapped in Warm Glow
“Givin’ It All Away” by Exceptional Failures is one of those rare tracks that feels like a deep breath after a long, emotional day—gentle, luminous, and quietly powerful. From the first few seconds, you know you’re stepping into something thoughtful. The intro has this subtle electronic shimmer, the kind that nudges you forward without overwhelming the moment, before the song blooms into a full, textural soundscape.
What really steals the spotlight here is the bansuri flute—front and center in a way you seldom hear in a contemporary singer-songwriter track. It’s not just decoration; it’s a heartbeat. When the second chorus cuts out, and the flute takes over, it’s honestly a magical moment. That solo doesn’t just add beauty; it feels like a release, like the emotional core of the song rising to the surface.
The production is layered but tender—lush vocal stacks, warm acoustic touches, and an arrangement that keeps shifting just enough to keep you leaning in. And underneath all of that is the song’s emotional weight: a reflection on fractured relationships, the heaviness of unresolved hurt, and the courage it takes to forgive. You can feel the sincerity in every choice, from the breathing room in the mix to the way melodies stretch toward resolution.
“Givin’ It All Away” isn’t just a song—it’s a reminder. A reminder to speak up, to soften, to reconnect. And Exceptional Failures delivers that message with grace, vulnerability, and a sound that lingers long after the final note fades.
Prem Byrne – Forgot To Forgive
The Heart Learns to Unclench
Prem Byrne’s Forgot To Forgive doesn’t tiptoe into its message—it rises slowly, confidently, like someone finally ready to speak their truth. There’s a gentle tension running through the track, the kind that comes from sorting through old hurts and figuring out where the dust actually settled. Byrne channels that emotional clutter into something unexpectedly graceful, wrapping introspection in rich textures and thoughtful production.
The star of the show, without question, is the bansuri flute. It’s rare to hear it take the reins in a modern singer-songwriter arrangement, and here it shines with a kind of soulful clarity that feels both grounding and luminous. The moment the song pivots abruptly into that expressive flute section, the entire mood shifts—almost like the music itself is demonstrating what release sounds like. It’s bold, and it works beautifully.
What also stands out is how the track moves. Instead of settling into one groove, it drifts through several distinct sections, each with its own emotional shading. Lush backing vocals rise like warm echoes, and the subtle electronic coating at the beginning and end gives the piece a gentle frame, as though memory and reflection are bookending the story.
Forgot To Forgive leaves you with that quietly stirring feeling—the sense that maybe there’s someone you haven’t reached out to, something you haven’t let go of. Byrne doesn’t force the message; he lets it unfold, wrapped in melody, warmth, and a rare sincerity. It’s the kind of song that lingers long after the final note fades.
Rich Delinquent – Healing Factor
Electric Shadows, Soft Wounds
Healing Factor slips in like a midnight current—quiet at first, then steadily flooding the room with an intoxicating mix of tension and tenderness. The track blends atmospheric production with a pulse that feels almost cinematic, wrapping you in a world where emotion and energy run on equal voltage. It’s moody, it’s magnetic, and it never tries to hide the cracks in its surface—instead, it makes them glow.
The sound design leans into a darker palette, fusing sleek electronic textures with a steady, heartbeat-like rhythm that keeps everything anchored. There’s a haunting, floating quality to the melody, as though it’s drifting through fog and neon at the same time. Every layer feels deliberate, built to pull you deeper into its orbit.
The vocal interplay is the real thrill here. Two distinct energies move toward each other, clash, and then settle into a beautifully chaotic harmony. Their back-and-forth adds emotional weight, turning the song into something that feels like a whispered confession shared in the half-light.
Healing Factor doesn’t explode—it smolders. It leaves its mark slowly, sinking in with a kind of hypnotic inevitability. As a glimpse of what’s coming next in this evolving sonic universe, it’s bold, immersive, and charged with unmistakable intention. This track doesn’t just ask you to feel something—it dares you not to.
Max Sarre – The Mercedes
RACING INTO THE NIGHT
Max Sarre’s “The Mercedes” feels like slipping behind the wheel of your own freedom and flooring it straight into the midnight air. The track doesn’t try to overwhelm you — instead, it coasts in with a smooth, cinematic glow, the kind that makes city lights blur a little and your pulse settle into something strangely calm. And that’s exactly the magic Max has been sharpening over the years: a pop sound that carries emotion without ever feeling heavy.
There’s a polished intimacy in the production, thanks to his collaboration with Roberto Panovski. You can hear the late-night home-studio vibe baked right into its bones — warm, close, unhurried. The song moves with the quiet confidence of someone finally releasing what once weighed them down, trading emotional turbulence for the open road and a clean horizon. Max isn’t just singing about escape; he’s capturing the sensation of it, that breathless moment when you realize nothing is holding you anymore.
What really shines is how grounded yet expansive the track feels. You can sense Max’s journey — the charting EPs, the sold-out shows, the rising wave of listeners — all distilled into something beautifully personal. “The Mercedes” doesn’t roar; it glows. It’s the sound of a young artist stepping into his stride, both hands on the wheel, eyes steady on whatever comes next.
A late-night drive never sounded so liberating.
Lana Crow – Orwellian Times
A Mirror Wrapped in Fire
Lana Crow’s “Orwellian Times” doesn’t ease you in—it grabs you by the collar, tilts your chin up, and dares you to look straight at the frenzy we’ve dressed up as modern life. It’s sharp, it’s punchy, and it’s the kind of track that hits you with its message before you’ve even realised you’re humming along.
Crow’s blend of pop immediacy and rock-edged tension gives the song a heartbeat that feels both urgent and cinematic. The guitars bite without overwhelming, the synths glow with a moody undercurrent, and the vocals glide right between vulnerability and steel—like someone who’s tired of the noise but still rooting for us to wake up.
What really makes this track snap is the attitude behind it. Crow isn’t preaching from a pedestal. She’s standing right beside the listener, nudging us gently—okay, sometimes not so gently—to notice how easily we slip into outrage, how eagerly we join the digital stampede. There’s a certain mischievous clarity in the way she frames it: not condemnation, but a sly, knowing reminder that we helped build the chaos we now complain about.
Despite its heavy themes, “Orwellian Times” is ridiculously catchy, the kind of tune that loops in your head long after the speakers go quiet. Lana Crow manages a rare trick here: she makes introspection sound electrifying. With this release, she doesn’t just announce herself—she sparks a conversation you’ll actually want to have.
