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GFDailyMusic: Discover These New Tracks

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Lana Del Rey single cover.
Lana Del Rey single cover.
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Here are our daily picks for you featuring Lana Del Rey, After Ours, and more!

1. “VENEKA” (feat. Akapellah) – Rawayana

Sun-drenched and politically charged, “VENEKA” is Rawayana at their most layered — sonically and socially. The track glides with breezy Caribbean fusion, but underneath the groove is a pointed reflection on Venezuela’s diaspora and identity. It’s danceable resistance, gentle but unflinching, and as emotionally rich as it is rhythmically tight.

2. “Lord of Chaos” – Ken Carson

Unfiltered and hyper-charged, “Lord of Chaos” is digital destruction with designer shoes on. Ken Carson throws himself into a wall of blown-out beats, Auto-Tuned sneers, and nihilistic bravado. It’s glitchcore rap at full velocity — a soundtrack for overstimulation, self-importance, and not caring what burns.

3. “Henry, come on” – Lana Del Rey

Delicate, pleading, and absolutely devastating, “Henry, come on” is Lana Del Rey’s latest whispered tragedy. Her voice hovers above bare piano and hushed strings, evoking something old-world and painfully intimate. It’s not a ballad, it’s a voice memo from the edge — part prayer, part goodbye.

4. “I Miss My Dog” – M(h)aol 

Blunt, jagged, and brilliantly raw, “I Miss My Dog” reclaims post-punk minimalism for something deeply emotional. M(h)aol tackles trauma, loneliness, and safety with deadpan vocals and abrasive guitar stabs — a song that’s less about dogs and more about the absence of trust. Stark and subversive, it cuts deeper than its title suggests.

5. “One Last Time” – After Ours

Atmospheric and slow-burning, “One Last Time” is synth-pop soaked in regret and neon sadness. After Ours blends cinematic production with emotionally raw vocals, crafting a song that sounds like the final scene of a love you can’t stop replaying. It’s midnight music for the romantically wrecked.

From chaos to confession, this set reminds us that emotion isn’t always tidy — but it’s always real. These tracks linger like bruises and bright lights, refusing to fade quietly. Let them play, let them sting, let them stay.

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