Best New Songs (September 11, 2025)

Don't miss out on these great new tracks.

Best New Songs (September 11, 2025)

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.)

Casey Dienel: “Seventeen”

Casey Dienel’s new single, “Seventeen,” bowls me over. Dienel, who once made music under the name White Hinterland, is slowly teasing their new record, My Heart Is an Outlaw, and the last single, “Your Girl’s Upstairs,” was very, very good (take our word for it). But “Seventeen” is a different bird—one warped by an epic yet patient sprawl. It’s emotional, it’s overjoyed. The great Adam Schatz, of Landlady, plays a synth that wobbles and sways against the current of a four-part string melody, performed by violinists Laurann Angel and Lily Honigberg, violist Marta Honer, and cellist Emily Elkin. But there are too many working parts and small details here that ought to be celebrated, like the harmonies provided by Starr Busby, Nina Moffitt, and Jachary, or the bass guitar played by Spencer Zahn. And Carly Bond’s guitar is faint but aflame in the vibrations of Max Jaffe’s four-on-the-floor percussion. “Seventeen” is seven minutes long and, rather than drop us into the middle of a conversation, Dienel regales its story from the beginning. “Carol was a barfly with a red face,” they sing. “Saw a smile like his once, carved in a Jack-o-Lantern. When he moved, the whole bar swayed with him, like all that could steady him was making conversation with strange girls.” Adapted from real “memories and revelations” and set at a pub in Galway, Dienel turns a dance song about a charming stranger into a braided essay about infatuation and brevity and boozy ephemera with too many tattooable lines. I especially can’t get this one out of my head: “Some people are like magnets, they really got a shine to them. I guess you had to be there.” Dienel delivers every word with a nonchalance. Yet, there’s an ecstatic hue to every verse. All synapses are firing in the company of captivation: “It’ll feel like when you’re seventeen, like right before it all fell into place. One more round before the night is over, one last dance before we fade away.” —Matt Mitchell

Dove Ellis: “To the Sandals”

A debut single hasn’t stuck with me like this since JADE’s “Angel of My Dreams” got dropped on my head last year. But Dove Ellis, who is scheduled to open Geese’s North American tour dates this fall, sounds like he’s been here forever as “To the Sandals” unravels. The song, which is about “reflections on a failing shotgun marriage in Cancún,” and was mixed by the great Andrew Sarlo (Big Thief, Dijon), summons the ghosts of Radiohead and Black Country, New Road without depending on their styles for relevancy. What I’m trying to say is: Dove Ellis copies the homework but changes the answers. He gravitates toward tonal contrasts; instruments collide until they coalesce. The guitar reminds me of David Gilmour’s on “Wot’s… Uh the Deal?” and Ellis’ vocal isn’t too far away from Thom Yorke’s, his decaying holler never raising itself above Fred Donlon-Mansbridge’s wilted saxophone. With 30 seconds left to spare, the song takes a strident plunge, piecing corroded fragments of woodwind, acoustic guitar, rattling percussion, and Ellis’ now-distant vocal together with scotch tape. In his conclusion, Ellis delivers either a list of destinations or a collapsing salutation: “To the back teeth, to the front teeth, to the split tyres, to the penthouse, to the milk deal, to the wax seal, to the cracked heel, to the sandals.” Every song could sound like this and I’d still beg for a thousand more. —Matt Mitchell

dust: “Alastair”

One night last year, a man twice my age collapsed onto my shoulder in a bar, sobbing about how his three-year-old daughter would grow up to hate him. If I wrote a song about that encounter, it might sound like dust’s “Alastair,” born when Justin Teale and Gabriel Stove met a similarly unburdening stranger at the Mullumbimby Motel. Within minutes, he’d poured out his life story, then vanished. That mix of intimacy, unease, and mild humor—being conscripted into someone else’s crisis, unsure whether to comfort, recoil, or laugh—sits at the song’s core. The instrumentation and production linger in that uneasy warmth too: guitars circle but don’t resolve, horns press down like weather, a refrain (“He walks so the other ones don’t”) looping like a monotone mantra. The punchline comes at the end: “To think of all what we’ve been through,” Teale sings, before muttering right as the song cuts off entirely, “It’s only been five minutes.” —Casey Epstein-Gross

h. pruz: “Arrival”

Whether it’s a song by h. pruz or Sister., I am a card-carrying fan of Hannah Pruzinsky’s music. Their debut album, No Glory, was a favorite of mine last year, as Pruzinsky established themselves as a bucolic, if not surreal, roving, and emphatic lyricist. See: the one-two of “Hurting” and “Return Retreat.” But Pruzinsky’s next LP, Red sky at morning, named after a 2,000-year-old proverb in the New Testament, grapples with “the calm after the torrent, the future it may represent, and the past it may unearth.” Lead single “Arrival” is gentle, in the way an h. pruz song often is, with lyrics that reveal a fear trespassing within domesticity. “Promises start in the house, board up the doors,” Pruzinsky sings. “Paradise is found. There is no point where we give out. Sure of arriving, sure to stay awhile.” Even in the song’s stillness, Pruzinsky is anything but. Elijah Wolf’s harmonies are rending, while Florist’s Emily Sprague patches of modulated synth murmurs buzz around Felix Walworth’s snare-drum scrim like a glaring and Pruzinsky’s finger-picked roulades bask in the calm. “Arrival” reckons with cycles of leaving yet exits without ever raising its voice, as two conversations orbit each other for five minutes. —Matt Mitchell

Kali Uchis ft. Ravyn Lenae: “Cry about it!”

In 2024, we named Ravyn Lenae’s “Love Me Not” one of the best songs of the year, and she’s been blowing up steadily since releasing Bird’s Eye last August. Lenae clearly has an affection for the high-class sugar-rush of Motown girl groups, and it’s at full volume on “Cry about it!,” her new collaboration with the ever-splendid Kali Uchis, who is clearly still buzzing after releasing Sincerely, in May. We loved that album and I love this song. Spencer Stewart, a frequent collaborator of Laufey, co-wrote “Cry about it!,” which makes sense. It’s silky and vintage, tapping into both Uchis’ bilingual singing and Lenae’s doo-wop fixations. “Too bad, so sad, you should cry about it,” Uchis sings, before flipping the track into Spanish: “Llora llora hasta que, ya te deje de doler.” Lenae swoops in on a crest of velvet, singing, “Baby girl, take it easy. Losing sleep over envy, through you I can see clearly and I know why you’re hurt.” This is my favorite duet of 2025 so far, a song so luxurious I’m vibrating just writing about it. —Matt Mitchell

Skullcrusher: “Dragon”

The production of “Dragon,” the third single from Skullcrusher’s upcoming album, And Your Song is Like a Circle, distinguishes itself from the rest of Helen Ballentine’s discography—similar to “Exhale,” the rare percussion line anchors the song’s tempo, giving it a drive that is typically unsought in Ballentine’s ballads. Typical of many Skullcrusher songs, the lyrics are left to be searched for, hiding behind corners of echoed vocals. Ballentine sings in waves of despair, repeating “the weight is heavy” in rounds of harmony and layered vocals. As the song endures, it swells with distortion, and the steady piano lead is trumped by a buzzy synth. Ballentine sings until her repetition goes unnoticed, fusing with the pulsing wall of sound. “Dragon” heralds a new wave of the Skullcrusher sound: passionate, unabashed expression. —Caroline Nieto

Stella Donnelly: “Feel It Change”

After a three-year hiatus, Australian indie-rocker Stella Donnelly is preparing to release her new album, Love and Fortune. Her latest single from the record, “Feel it Change” touts an earworm melody in its verses, outlining the plaintive longing that comes with processing a relationship that’s done its time. Donnelly has always had a knack for brazen lyrics, and these are some of her most honest—the song holds the refrain, “I love you baby but I’m scared to be near you,” an admission that a lesser artist might skirt. But Donnelly sticks to her guns—she’s known for her no-frills writing and enticing melodies, both of which capture the merits of “Feel it Change.” To describe her new record, Donnelly has put it simply: “it’s all heart.” And that’s what “Feel it Change” is—a labyrinth of vulnerability. —Caroline Nieto

The Belair Lip Bombs: “Don’t Let Them Tell You (It’s Fair)”

On “Don’t Let Them Tell You (It’s Fair),” the new single from the Belair Lip Bombs, Maisie Everett’s singing is a blockbuster, and the riffs curling around her spill out of guitars that wouldn’t sound out of place on, say, that great new Florry album. The song is a saga of unpredictable volumes, skating through post-punk and country-rock like it’s no one’s business. Last month, I declared “Hey You” as one of my favorite songs of 2025 so far. I still think that, because I love how infectious and anthemic it is, but “Don’t Let Them Tell You (It’s Fair”) is just as perfect, perhaps even more so. Alex Lahey came up with the “you gotta make your own luck,” and the the debaucherous, twin-guitar chords twist, shriek, and crash into honky-tonk bedlam. And that dirty tone on Jimmy Droughton’s bass… Stick a fork in me, I’m plum captivated! This is the Melbourne quartet at its best, in a bluesy hailstorm of porch-playing impulse. Halloween can’t come soon enough; I need Again here right now. —Matt Mitchell

The Mountain Goats: “Armies of the Lord”

If the Mountain Goats’ new single, “Armies of the Lord,” sounds like a song taken from a musical reimagining of Robinson Crusoe (with many creative liberties, of course) that hasn’t been staged yet, that’s probably because it pretty much is. Jenny From Thebes might have been John Darnielle’s “fake musical,” as he lovingly dubbed it, but Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan is the full-blown real thing. (You can tell, because Lin-Manuel Miranda—yes, that Lin-Manuel Miranda—handles all the harmonies. Yes, I’m being for real. Yes, I feel like I’ve hit my head and woken up in some dream I probably would’ve had in 2016.) Across the twelve tracks, the record will chronicle shipwreck, dwindling survivors, and visions of the end times, all themes already very much at the center of “Armies.” Darnielle’s perpetually excellent lyrics set the tone: waiting for salvation, fearing it won’t come, feeling “in the world but not of it anymore,” watching death take everyone until it’s only you—and a guy named Peter Balkan—left on the shore. The band goes guitarless here, trading in jangling riffs for orchestral heft and striking piano, like a sea shanty that’s swallowed a Broadway overture. And by the time Darnielle’s steady, emotive voice gives way to drums, harp, and Miranda’s layered harmonies (still not over it), “Armies” makes its promise clear: this isn’t just another record, it’s the staging of a whole new world. —Casey Epstein-Gross

Whitney: “Back to the Wind”

As summer crawls into autumn’s mouth, I am thinking about Whitney now more than ever. Their music is exactly that to me—a transition, between loves, seasons, and people. Between one body and the next. To tumble into the Chicagoans’ work is to acquaint yourself with not only Julien Ehrlich’s balmy falsetto and lush, detail-minded songwriting, but Max Kakacek’s adjoining, labyrinthine guitar. Forever Turned Around is still a CMC (Certified Matt Classic), despite the stylistic hiccup of their last LP, the polished but strange SPARK. But Whitney have moved on from that, and their new album, Small Talk, sounds like Forever Turned Around’s true successor. “Dandelions” was great, but “Darling” was even better. This week’s installment, “Back to the Wind,” impossibly topples them both. Whitney’s show at Mr. Smalls in September 2019 was the last concert I was ever front-row for; watching Julien Ehrlich and Max Kakacek lead their bandmates into a pocket of harmonious soft-rock awed me once and I’m still buzzing about it six years later. That’s how “Back to the Wind” hit me, with honeyed guitars, J.J. Kirkpatrick’s rising trumpet, and Macie Stewart’s backdrop of strings. And Ehrlich’s lyrics are, unsurprisingly, a salve. “Floating through a crowded street upside down, there’s hope in the city ‘round this time,” he sings. “I can show you what it looks like.” This song is going to erupt on stage. The barricade is calling my name. —Matt Mitchell

Other Notable Songs This Week: Dendrons: “Tuck Me Under”; Gab Ferreira: “Seu Olhar”; Home Front: “Light Sleeper”; jasmine.4.t: “I Can’t Believe I Did This Without You”; Machine Girl: “Rabbit Season”; Melody’s Echo Chamber & El Michels Affair: “Daisy”; Militarie Gun: “Throw Me Away”; Ragana & Drowse: “In Eternal Woods Pt. 2-3”; Ribbon Skirt: “LUCKY8”; Sudan Archives: “COME AND FIND YOU”; The Last Dinner Party: “The Scythe”; Villagerrr: “Portsmouth Raceway”

Check out a playlist of this week’s best new songs below.

 
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