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.)
Blue Bendy: “Poke”
I think I have something of a love-hate relationship with “Poke,” Blue Bendy’s first release since their debut record last year (in other words, our first glance at Blue Bendy post-internal-drama and post-lineup-change). Sonically, it’s wonderful: frontman Arthur Nolan’s vocals are as captivatingly unpredictable as ever, all the more so when surrounded by those beautifully dissonant piano stabs and bursts of quiet harmony, that tingling synth and insistent percussion. But man, is it hard to hear lines like “Extra long, you can call me bae / Pookie doubled down on the hospital stays” without instinctively cringing. Yes, I know that it’s trying to make fun of social media and its terminology (see: the title, which refers to the lost art of Facebook poking), but apparently hearing “bae” and “pookie” in the wild still triggers a mild fight or flight response in me—but I think that, too, is kind of the point. The song opens on Nolan groaning in frustration that someone on the internet spread a rumor that he’d “gone insane,” which… Well, perhaps the statement Nolan wrote to accompany the single tells it best: “‘Who started the rumour of my insanity, and is a Facebook poke still hot 10 years on?’ This pretty much sums up our last 18 months perfectly. Maybe with a pinch of salt.” As a result, there’s a genuine frustration to “Poke” that belies the satire of it: is it a parodic send-up of the melodrama of the terminally online, or a self-aware externalization of it? After I first heard the track, I wrestled with that question for a solid ten minutes—but then I realized that even asking it kind of misses the point. After all, isn’t a song that blurs a line infinitely more interesting than a song maintaining it? —Casey Epstein-Gross
“I get a little upset / I just can’t take it yet.” The third single from Cate Le Bon’s forthcoming LP, Michelangelo Dying, is an unsettling track affixed with guitar reverb, pulsing synths, and crisp vocals at the front of the mix. The song feels like it exists inside a hollow, empty room, with nothing but four walls for the sounds to bounce off of. There’s the occasional self-harmony and backing moves, like on the hook “I’m not lying / In a bed you made,” that add a church-like punch to certain lines. “About Time” doesn’t build so much as it persists, slowly and sneakily growing with more droning synths, layered vocals, and resonant bass tones as it continues. When the synth blares into oblivion a deep reevaluation of relationships and expectations arises and ends with a “Collect yourself / Rigid collapse” loop. Le Bon’s vocals slowly overtaken by all the echo, and the cyclical nature of the closing refrains feels like a ritual, as if life is just alternating between those two things: falling apart and then picking up the pieces. —Cassidy Sollazzo
Cut Copy ft. Kate Bollinger: “Belong to You”
While I was already familiar with Kate Bollinger, the psych-pop song “Belong to You” is, admittedly, my first taste of the veteran synth-pop band Cut Copy. The new single, about a man who is so obsessed with his past mistakes that he can’t enjoy the present moment, feels all too relatable. “All that you want is already here,” vocalist Dan Whitford sings, echoed by Bollinger: “Roads that point to nowhere led me back to your heart.” It’s a wistful back and forth, a reminder that this mysterious world often ends up shepherding you towards the path you’re meant to follow. The rousing message of “Belong to You,” boosted by vibrant synthesizers, airy pedal steel, and stacked harmonies, is an important one—necessary in an age where content and trends are fighting to steal our attention away from the important, fleeting things unfolding right in front of us. —Camryn Teder
Fine: “Portal”
For me, Fine’s last album, 2024’s Rocky Top Ballads, signaled the start of a summer of sunset drives and late nights basking in the moody lamp lights in my bedroom. On tracks like “Big Muzzy” and “Days Incomplete” especially, I felt myself sinking into another one-sided love affair with a Copenhagen musician, much like my previous brushes with ML Buch and Smerz. When I saw Fine released another single this week, at the conclusion of summer, I was elated. “Portal” came just in time for me. The song features a minimal soundscape, one of Fine’s sparest yet, with nothing more than her singular vocal line, a guitar, and subtle percussive flourishes filling out the spaces in-between and beneath her. It’s a song that feels truly intimate as she croons, “You keep on feeling lost / You keep your fingers crossed / Maybe it’s all we got, but it’s not enough.” —Camryn Teder
Hatchie: “Lose It Again”
I’ve been a big Hatchie fan since 2020 and became particularly attached to her 2018 EP, Sugar & Spice. While I’ve loved all of her releases since, to me, nothing topped that record. But after hearing her first single off her upcoming album, Liquorice, I’m convinced we’re going to get Hatchie’s best album yet. “Lose It Again” sounds like if Cocteau Twins and Oasis shagged and made a gorgeous song-child. Hatchie’s music has always felt intimate to me, ripe for listening in solitude while daydreaming, rather than in a large, crowded room. But “Lose It Again” begs for an arena moment. With its commanding, hazy guitars and sing-along chorus, it’s the expansive sound that will surely take Hatchie to the next level. —Tatiana Tenreyro
Liam Kazar’s new album, Pilot Light, is his first in four years, but he’s been anything but still since Due North. Last February, his song “Next Time Around” floored me, though I was surprised that news of something else didn’t immediately follow. But, considering the recent work he’s been doing with Hannah Cohen, Sam Evian, and Jeff Tweedy, appearing on the latter’s upcoming triple-album, I can understand why. “The Word The War,” the lead single from Pilot Light, is what I imagine Tom Petty might have sounded like had he started making music about ten years earlier. The tune was recorded at Evian’s Flying Cloud Studios in the Catskills and you can certainly tell: At the front of the mix, Kazar’s guitar jangles and rambles against wisps of Cohen and Sima Cunningham’s ageless vocal; in a sun-dappled backdrop, Sean Mullins’ snare splashes against cresting bass thuds; Kazar sings, “What good’s a home if it isn’t full of love,” in one ear while the tune gently boogies in the other. To be quite honest with you, it’s hard to talk about “The Word The War” without sounding like Kazar paid me to. This thing is just that fucking good. —Matt Mitchell
My Wonderful Boyfriend: “I’m Your Man”
I covered My Wonderful Boyfriend in late 2024, when they released the very good single “My New Shirt.” The EP that followed in January, An Evening with…, was quite good and left me salivating at the thought of a MWB full-length. Who knows if that’s on the way yet, but new single “I’m Your Man” is fucking perfect. With flickers of piano calling back to LCD Soundsystem’s “All My Friends” and a vocal delivery from P.J. McCormick that’d get Stephen Malkmus humming along, “I’m Your Man” is pop rock exactly as it should be: syrupy singing, sun-dappled Jazzmasters, and a chugging, damn-near-choogling drum beat. When McCormick’s garage yawp collides with a backdrop of fizziness, My Wonderful Boyfriend play the “It’s not easy but it’s all right” conclusion like they own it. My head’s still spinning, goddamn. —Matt Mitchell
Princess Nokia: “Blue Velvet”
David Lynch had such a beautiful reverence for the women in his projects that it’s frustrating when people who haven’t watched the breadth of his work claim that because he often featured female characters who were in abusive dynamics, he had a sick joy in seeing women suffer. Even Roger Ebert said so in his notorious one-star review of Blue Velvet, where he claimed that Isabella Rossellini was “degraded” in the film (the actress spoke against the late critic’s words, saying her character was actually quite nuanced). When you watch any of Lynch’s classics, it’s evident that instead of portraying his protagonists as women who are merely broken, he gives them depth, writing them as complex characters who shape his surrealist worlds. This is what Princess Nokia conveys in her new single “Blue Velvet,” where she declares she’s “David Lynch, babe” and dedicates the song to her “rapist and all of my abusers,” as she likens herself to Twin Peaks‘ imperfect victim, Laura Palmer, while reminding that just because men have tried to break her spirit, that doesn’t mean she’s succumbing to being silenced. —Tatiana Tenreyro
Saint Etienne & Confidence Man: “Brand New Me”
The last single off London trio Saint Etienne’s final LP, International (out tomorrow), is a fun and breezy collaboration with Australian electro-pop group Confidence Man. The disco pop-meets-drum ’n’ bass tune alternates between spoken word interludes and snappy hooks. Bright horns and a pulsing beat demand a pep in your step, while the lyrics chronicle a tale of brushing off and moving on in the search for better. The “I had another change of heart / I had another change in me / Baby it’s a brand new me / Tellin’ everyone I know” chorus is contextualized by the “I’m not the girl you used to know since I packed my bags to go / Darling, darling, mon amor, my lips never said my heart was pure / Maybe time’s the cure” monologue, and there’s an air of nostalgia to the ‘90s-inspired production. Subtle record scratches mix with the intricate breakbeat in a way that makes the whole song feel like an unearthed early-’90s UK EDM demo. Confidence Man’s vivid and energetic sound adds a thicker texture to Saint Etienne’s blissed-out grooves, and Sarah Cracknell and Janet Planet’s vocals are lusher than ever. —Cassidy Sollazzo
The Antlers: “Something In the Air”
Obviously the point of releasing a “visualizer” alongside a song is to help listeners, well, visualize it, but I’ve never really understood their appeal (as opposed to that of, say, a music video)—at least until today. The Antlers’ latest single is haunting and bare, lilting forward like a ghost wandering out of an attic and through the rooms of a long-abandoned home, before exploding into a near-violent sublime, orchestral and grand and all-consuming, only to then shrink down once more into the small and quiet in a chilling denouement. It is everything you’ve ever loved about the Antlers: cinematic, enveloping, ineffable. And “Something In the Air” is also, apparently, the sonic manifestation of an eerie, dim, sepia-toned and home-recorded video tour through a cardboard dollhouse that suddenly gets gazed on by a sort of divine light forceful enough to make the walls quake and the furniture fly as the shadow of a human hand begins to grasp towards the house’s exterior, getting larger and larger as it’s about to crush the whole thing— and then you’re back looking out a window from inside the house, now lightless again, as a slow zoom takes you through the familiar interior only to see the rooms have all been emptied. Now, that is such a strange specific narrative that I would never have thought of myself, but, I mean, that’s literally the song. That’s exactly how it feels—and how intense it feels too. Holy shit, man. Is this what it feels like to undergo a spiritual reckoning? —Casey Epstein-Gross
Best New Song That Came Out Right When We Hit Publish On Last Week’s List: Hayley Williams, “Parachute”
In early August, Hayley Williams released 17 singles. Last week, she compiled them into an official album, which I thought was very, very good. But Ego Death At a Bachelorette Party had one more trick up its sleeve: “Parachute.” The devastating 18th and final track from Williams’ file-dump is a shiny synth-pop prize—a revelation, considering how good everything before it already was, that serves as a reminder that her talents are broader and far more contrasting than Paramore’s safest conventions. The bounce of the “I thought you were gonna catch me, I never stopped falling for you” chorus is not only total ear-candy, but a new contender for Williams’ most confident, intimate, and captivating achievement yet. If only every breakup song could be so catchy —Matt Mitchell
Other Notable Songs This Week: Dim Wizard ft. Katie Dey: “Stoicism”; Dylan Earl: “Two Kinds of Loner”; Eleni Drake: “Half Alive”; Grumpy: “Rice”; Jane Inc: “freefall”; knitting: “Fold”; Lucrecia Dalt: “no death no danger”; NoSo: “Nara”; Sabrina Carpenter: “My Man On Willpower”; Sword II: “Even If It’s Just a Dream”; Tame Impala: “Loser”
Check out a playlist of this week’s best new songs below.