LaNyna – You Drive Me Crayze
Unfiltered Energy on the Dancefloor
LaNyna arrives with a debut that feels like a declaration. The track pulses with a confident house beat that refuses to sit still, built for late nights where the music does the talking.
What makes the song stand out is its attitude. There’s no attempt to soften edges or play it safe. Instead, the production leans into boldness, pairing slick electronic textures with a rhythm that feels both polished and raw. The Latin and urban influences weave naturally into the sound, giving it a distinct identity without ever feeling forced. It’s the kind of track that thrives in motion—on crowded floors, in dim lights, where inhibition starts to blur.
There’s also a sense of control behind the chaos. Every beat drop feels intentional, every shift measured, even as the overall vibe stays wild and unfiltered. That balance between precision and rebellion is where the song really lands.
For a debut, this is a confident step. It doesn’t ask for approval—it assumes it. And in doing so, it carves out a space that feels entirely its own.
Shortout Kid – Pet Song
Static and Softness Collide
Shortout Kid’s Pet Song feels like something built in isolation and then suddenly unleashed into the world without warning. There’s a raw, almost volatile edge to it, but underneath all that abrasion sits a surprisingly delicate core. It’s this tension—between chaos and vulnerability—that gives the track its pulse.
Right from the start, the sound design stands out. The textures are jagged, mechanical, and slightly unsettling, as if the music itself is alive and humming with electricity. Yet, instead of overwhelming, it circles a quieter emotional center. The distant beats feel like echoes rather than anchors, allowing the softer elements to breathe in unexpected ways. It’s not an easy balance to strike, but Shortout Kid manages to hold both extremes without letting either collapse.
There’s also a sense of intention behind the noise. Nothing feels random. Every distorted layer, every flicker of electronic grit seems placed to contrast the song’s more human side. It creates a listening experience that feels immersive, almost physical—like standing too close to a machine that might either break down or come alive.
What lingers most is the feeling that Pet Song isn’t just trying to be heard—it’s trying to be felt, even if that feeling is a little uncomfortable. It’s rough around the edges, sure, but that roughness is exactly what makes it stick.
Cable Street Riot – AGAINST THE WAVES
Holding the Pressure
Cable Street Riot’s Against the Waves doesn’t rush to comfort you—it lets the weight settle in first. From the opening moments, there’s a restrained, almost nostalgic 80s-tinged line that feels deceptively simple, like the calm surface of something much deeper. But the track doesn’t stay still for long. It slowly stretches outward, gathering density, layering sound upon sound until it becomes something far heavier and harder to ignore.
What stands out most is the song’s refusal to offer easy release. Instead of chasing a clean, satisfying payoff, Cable Street Riot leans into tension—letting it build, linger, and press against the listener. The vocals are deliberately blurred and distant, less about delivering a clear message and more about carrying an emotional weight that feels shared but unspoken. It’s a choice that works beautifully, reinforcing the sense of quiet overwhelm running through the track.
There’s a subtle sense of political and personal fatigue woven into the fabric here, though it never turns overtly declarative. It just exists, like a low hum in the background of everyday life. And then, just when it feels like the pressure might plateau, the song swells into a final crescendo—less a release and more a culmination, like a wave that never quite breaks but still crashes all the same.
Against the Waves is immersive, patient, and quietly powerful—a song that doesn’t demand attention, but earns it the longer you sit with it.
Britney Freud – Feelings For Violence
Soft Bruises, Loud Hearts
There’s something disarmingly raw about the way Britney Freud introduces Feelings For Violence. It doesn’t arrive polished or restrained—it stumbles in, a little messy, a little bruised, and entirely human. That tension between tenderness and grit becomes the song’s heartbeat, pulling you into a space where vulnerability feels almost confrontational.
Sonically, the track leans into a scrappy, sleazy kind of bubblegum punk—hooks that stick, edges that scrape. There’s a looseness to it, like it could fall apart at any moment, but that’s exactly what gives it weight. The unexpected violin moment, teetering between irony and sincerity, somehow lands perfectly, adding a strange emotional texture that lingers longer than you’d expect.
What really sets this debut apart is its emotional core. Britney Freud isn’t just performing; there’s a quiet unpacking happening beneath the noise. The song circles around loss—not romantic, but something arguably more complex: the fracture of a close friendship. That ache is handled without theatrics, which makes it hit harder. It feels unresolved, like it’s still being processed in real time.
There’s also a broader pulse running underneath—a push against the rigid expectations of masculinity. Not in a preachy way, but in a lived-in, almost hesitant honesty. It invites openness without forcing it.
For a debut, Feelings For Violence doesn’t try to have all the answers. It just sits in the discomfort—and strangely, that’s where it feels most alive.
