At Paste Music, we’re listening to so many new tunes on any given day, we barely have any time to listen to each other. Nevertheless, every week we can swing it, we take stock of the previous seven days’ best new songs, delivering a weekly playlist of our favorites. Check out this week’s material, in alphabetical order. (You can check out an ongoing playlist of every best new songs pick of 2025 here.)
Dijon: “Yamaha”
Dijon does the dated stuff better than most, preserving the ‘80s and ‘90s in grains and textures rather than copying someone else’s image or attitude, and his new album Baby is meteoric proof that his debut, Absolutely, was star-making and his sound will command R&B’s next destiny without leaving any of its ancestry behind. The vocals on “Yamaha,” which come in at every direction, boast a handsomeness not unlike prime D’Angelo and stack where guitars rambled in Dijon’s work three years ago. Here, his voice is not only his instrument but an ecstatic ride that plays well into the album’s collage-y, with cresting, contrasting synth programming, manipulated pitches, choral tangents, and Top 40 piano drama coagulating. For some, that might make for a frustrating listen. For me, it makes writing down whatever hyphenated genres have been swirling around Dijon’s output feel less corny. Alt-R&B, post-pop, anti-Americana, and nu-jungle are all ludicrous descriptors but apropos. “Yamaha” sounds out of time but of the moment. —Matt Mitchell
Elias Rønnenfelt ft. Dean Blunt: “tears on his rings and chains”
Iceage guitarist Elias Rønnenfelt and Dean Blunt are two of my favorite collaborators. From their sunny 2023 single “Smile Please” to the recent release of their EP Lucre, the duo’s meshing of post-punk and experimental rock is a fusion that just makes sense. On Rønnenfelt and Blunt’s latest collaborative effort “tears on his rings and chains,” warm guitars mingle with midtempo drums and sparse synths to create a dizzyingly romantic soundscape. The song’s clean production gives it an innately effortless sound, while Rønnenfelt’s broken vocals provide a satisfying contrast to the cleansing backdrop. “And I just wasn’t made up for these times, but I don’t care as long as you are mine,” Rønnenfelt sings, traversing equally poetic themes of love and existentialism. It’s another satisfying piece of off-kilter rock from two of the scene’s best voices. —Camryn Teder
Greg Freeman: “Salesman”
Greg Freeman’s “Salesman” doesn’t just knock—it barges in, briefcase swinging, kicking up dust as the band tears into one of the liveliest cuts on Burnover. Slide guitar smears across the mix, horns jab in like punctuation marks, the rhythm section pulling everything forward with a reckless kind of swagger. It’s a strange, exhilarating tension: the lyrics circle mortality, fate, the inevitability of time’s door-to-door routine, but the music refuses to sink under that weight. Freeman sings about clocks, rules, bullshit, and eternity, his voice catching somewhere between resignation and a grin, and the band answers back by sounding like they’d rather keep playing than let life itself get a word in. Halfway through, the song unspools into a screeching instrumental stretch—pedal steel grinding into sax, riffs unraveling into their own crooked logic. It doesn’t feel like a funeral march, but a stubborn detour, a tongue-in-cheek joyride, a way of putting off the knock just a little longer. That’s the trick of “Salesman”: it knows what’s coming, but it dances anyway. Sometimes the racket is the only rebellion we’ve got. —Casey Epstein-Gross
Jean Dawson: “Rock A Bye Baby”
As he told me in our cover story conversation in January, the wisdom of Prince’s music remains one of the best gestures of love in Jean Dawson’s life. It’s become, as he put it, a “Lovecraftian romance.” Dawson’s work is a vault not just of Black performance, but of cross-generational excellence—just as Prince’s mononymic heritage was and is. Dawson’s first single since last year’s Glimmer of God, “Rock A Bye Baby,” is superbly culled from the education that Prince’s innovations have afforded pop music for four decades. It’s a chugging, snappy synth-pop track smacked with rattling snares and head-pounding bass phrases. But don’t get it twisted: Dawson’s latest is not a novelty or some, as he would say, “retro-fuck.” A song covered in chrome, “Rock A Bye Baby” lovingly wears its inspirations into the present. I’ve been saying that dance music is up right now, and it’s echoing back to me. This is pop perfection. Templates remain outdated in the company of Dawson’s ear. —Matt Mitchell
Joyce Manor: “All My Friends Are So Depressed”
It was about time for some new music from Joyce Manor. After a 3-year absence, the SoCal punk band returned this week with “All My Friends Are So Depressed.” Bandleader Barry Johnson said the track comes from his stab at writing a Joyce Manor version of Lana Del Rey’s lyrical style, with references to the Lord on Tecate trucks, key lime pie, writing songs being high, wearing a dress, and, of course, being deep in depression. Close enough! But instead of fully committing to the bit and making it sound like a Lana track, Joyce Manor goes for an alt-country slant, a direction that feels fitting with the genre’s rise to the mainstream. Johnson has always been a vivid songwriter, one who, even when approaching songs with a sense of humor, makes them feel sincere and conversational, so it’s no wonder that even while challenging himself with an admittedly silly prompt, he comes up with something that still retains that relatable quality. The way he casually throws out the line “Wish that I would fucking die” is said with the same cadence as you would while venting to a friend. And who wouldn’t go for some “key lime pie and Frampton live”? —Tatiana Tenreyro
Despite the accolades Madison Cunningham has today (at just 28 years old, she’s a Grammy Award-winning artist and has worked with the likes of Lucius, Andrew Bird, and Mumford & Sons) she’s still not as renowned as I believe she truly should be. Her frequent use of jazz chords and alternate guitar tunings, tender lyrics, and beautiful, acrobatic vocals are underrated and innovative. I hope the imminent release of her third album, Ace, gives her popularity a deserved boost. Lead single “My First Name” finds Cunningham swapping her usual guitar for piano. Here, vibrant keys frame Cunningham’s revealing lyrics, the words as simultaneously sprawling and intimate as an ancient work of poetry. “I love it when you say my full name and the way you always speak your mind,” she sings. “When the needle finally finds the vein, all your little sayings become mine.” Cello and clarinet bring warmth to the track, until an entire orchestra comes to complete the soundscape. Swelling with heart and emotion, “My Full Name” is another rousing glimpse of Cunningham’s songcraft. —Camryn Teder
Nation of Language: “In Your Head”
I’ve been obsessed with Nation of Language’s previous single “Under the Water” and its follow-up, “In Your Head,” has me hooked just as much. While “Under the Water” felt as refreshing as taking a dip in the pool, with simple, upbeat synths, “In Your Head” is its moodier, more complex counterpart. Here, Ian Devaney’s vocals come in as nearly a whisper, as he sings about what happens when you strive for success and finally get it, but aren’t satiated yet: “The cut cord / The fixation and the shame / I got every little thing I wanted / And yet still I had to take.” It’s hypnotic, drawing you in and making its nearly five-minute run not feel long enough. —Tatiana Tenreyro
Silver Gore: “All the Good Men”
Ava Gore and Ethan P. Flynn heard that people were yearning for mid-2010s electro-rock and simply had to deliver. “All The Good Men” feels like Phantogram on steroids, with blaring synths, airy yet upfront single-note vocals, faraway marimbas, and crunchy drum patterns abound. The second single off the duo’s debut EP, Dogs In Heaven (out September 12), is a quippy, shuffling track that starts big and ends bigger. At just under two minutes, it makes use of every second, diving into intricate breakbeats and glimmering synth arpeggios, ending on a bit of a sonic cliffhanger with an unresolved chord. By the time you’re fully in it, they just yank the rug out in a jarring but satisfying way. The lyrics cut through unsatisfactory men, insisting on pushing past them toward whatever good ones are still around. “Had a boy, was emotionally incompetent / Had to get a man who couldn’t take a compliment” is kind of the read of the century. — Cassidy Sollazzo
Water From Your Eyes: “Nights In Armor”
One of my most anticipated albums of the year, It’s A Beautiful Place, is out tomorrow. To hold everyone over until then, Water From Your Eyes shared “Nights In Armor,” a disorienting and propulsive track that fuses thick, gritty guitars with bedroom-pop synth shimmers into a futuristic electroclash-metal-pop fever dream. The song morphs and expands, flowing through mini-movements and phases. It’s thrashing and feral one moment, crisp and isolated the next—racing forward then pulling it all back. Brown’s vocals, hypnotic as ever, hover atop the buzz, double-tracked and matter-of-fact. The lyrics shift between single words and rushed run-ons, so when Brown emphasizes certain phrases and barrels through others on lines like “I found out you can lie still / Your system will scar but to death so I bet,” they boil over with urgency. By the final, cymbal-heavy, bass-throbbing, guitar-spinning explosion, their vocals are chorused and harmonized with an uncanny robotic bend. It’s overwhelming and delirious and leaves my ears ringing and brain vibrating by the end. —Cassidy Sollazzo
Wednesday: “Bitter Everyday”
Any song that immediately pays homage to grocery store sushi, the nectar of broke 20-somethings, is automatically destined to be a banger. Case in point: Wednesday’s “Bitter Everyday.” On this fourth and final Bleeds single, the North Carolina darlings don’t waste any time, coming in swinging with fuzzed-out guitars and Karly Hartzman’s deadpan litany of scenes too specific to be invented: ketamine chopped on a motel key, a creek that smells like potpourri, a stranger who sings on your porch then turns up weeks later on a wanted flyer in full juggalo paint. (That last one, at least, is Hartzman’s own memory from a night in 2019). It plays like a Southern Gothic parable gone electric: roadside hauntings, cheap highs, fleeting grace. Threaded through the chaos is a chorus that borrows its shape from Iris DeMent’s “Easy’s Gettin’ Harder Everyday,” reframed here as a bleak little chant about sweetness turning bitter, abundance turning scarce. The band rages against that entropy with distortion and noise, but eventually the fight burns off. By the final minute, the storm clears, leaving just Hartzman and an acoustic guitar to sing the refrain one last time. After all the fuzz and fury, it lands like a cold shock: the everyday stripped bare, no distortion to hide behind. —Casey Epstein-Gross
Other Notable Songs This Week: Anna von Hausswolff: “Stardust”; Carly Rae Jepsen: “More”; claire rousay ft. m sage: “just”; Dean Johnson: “So Much Better”; Flock of Dimes: “Afraid”; Good Flying Birds ft. Wishy: “Fall Away”; Jeff Tweedy: “Feel Free”; Jobber: “Clothesline From Hell”; Machine Girl: “Come On Baby, Scrape My Data”; Madi Diaz: “Ambivalence”; Nick Shoulders: “Dixie Be Damned”; Tchotchke: “Playin’ Dumb”’ Westerman: “Adriatic”
Check out a playlist of this week’s best new songs below.