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Jeffrey Chan – Rebound Boy

Jeffrey Chan’s “Rebound Boy” Strikes a Universally Relatable Chord
On “Rebound Boy,” Jeffrey Chan turns emotional limbo into something magnetic, threading the sting of being someone’s in-between into a sleek electropop pulse. Lush synths swell beneath glossy, hook-driven melodies, while Chan’s vocal delivery carries a quiet ache. The kind that lingers after a connection dissolves without warning. It’s the sound of recognition hitting in real time: you weren’t the ending, just a chapter.
Drawing from the blurred lines of modern dating–ghosting, situationships, the slow fade–Chan captures a distinctly contemporary heartbreak with clarity and restraint. Born in Sydney and now based in Los Angeles, he’s built a global following through club stages and Pride festival circuits, amassing millions of streams along the way. “Rebound Boy” extends the emotional terrain of his EP Boys Like Us, pairing vulnerability with a polished electronic sheen. It’s introspective, yes. But built to move, transforming uncertainty into something undeniably kinetic.
DJ Thommek – A Little BIT

DJ Thommek Paints Soundscapes with “A Little Bit” Release
There’s a quiet kind of radiance at the heart of DJ Thommek’s “A Little Bit.” The soft glow of sunlight cutting through stillness, translated into sound. Drawing from melodic EDM and house, Thommek channels the introspective calm of Edward Hopper’s Morning Sun into a track that feels both intimate and kinetic. Warm female vocals drift across a steady, pulsing groove, capturing that fleeting space where contemplation meets movement.
A multidisciplinary artist, Thommek extends his sonic world into the visual, creating his own cover art with pastel chalk–a tactile counterpoint to his digital production. His evolution from guitar-led bands to electronic composition underscores a restless creative instinct, one that prioritizes feeling as much as form. “My music is not just about sound, but about storytelling,” he notes. With “A Little Bit,” that story unfolds in subtle gradients. A balance of light, rhythm, and emotional release that lingers well beyond the final beat.
Sporty O – The P.L.U.R. Project

Sporty O’s The P.L.U.R. Project Reframes Dance Music with Purposeful Unity
Sporty O’s The P.L.U.R. Project lands as both a return to dance music’s roots and a forward-facing statement of intent. Built on the enduring ethos of peace, love, unity, and respect, the seven-track EP moves with purpose, fusing high-impact festival energy with moments of genuine introspection. Tracks like “Spirit Higher” surge with euphoric lift, while “Piece of My Mind” pulls inward, offering a more reflective counterbalance. The result is a dynamic arc that values emotional range as much as rhythmic release.
A mainstay of Atlanta’s boundary-blurring scene, Sporty O continues to merge EDM and hip hop with instinctive precision, a hybrid sound that’s carried him to global stages like Tomorrowland and EDC. But The P.L.U.R. Project is less about scale and more about intention. “It encourages personal emotional management,” he explains–a framing that positions the EP as both soundtrack and tool. In a culture often driven by excess, Sporty O leans into connection, delivering a project that pulses with meaning as much as momentum.
Mara Van Dyck – Not Alone

Mara Van Dyck’s “Not Alone” Shines as a Beacon of Connection
Mara Van Dyck moves with quiet gravity on “Not Alone,” her voice cutting through the haze of dream pop and dark R&B with a clarity that feels both fragile and assured. The track begins in near stillness–intimate, almost whispered–before unfolding into something more expansive, a slow-burning lift that mirrors the emotional shift at its core. It’s the sound of isolation giving way, however briefly, to connection.
Working in cinematic textures, Mara builds atmosphere without losing focus on the vocal–her true anchor. There’s a tension between softness and resolve here, an undercurrent of strength that pushes against the song’s more delicate edges. Where her debut Just For You leaned inward, “Not Alone” carries a subtle urgency, a willingness to step into the light. “It’s a reminder that the voice telling you you’re alone is often wrong,” she says. In that sense, the track lands not as a grand statement, but as something more enduring: a steady, reassuring presence in the dark.
DJ Super Will – Midnight Don’t Care

When the Clock Strikes, DJ Super Will Ignites with “Midnight Don’t Care”
Under the wash of Detroit streetlights, DJ Super Will’s “Midnight Don’t Care” hits with intent–a sleek collision of electropop sheen and Jersey Club bounce, grounded by the city’s unmistakable grit. The track moves with dual purpose, threading introspective undercurrents through a rhythm built to ignite. It’s controlled chaos in motion, balancing reflection with release.
Will has long positioned himself as more than a producer, framing his output as “club weapons” engineered for impact. Here, that philosophy sharpens. Following the hybrid sensibilities of Love & Distortion: Reloaded, “Midnight Don’t Care” expands his palette without losing focus. The lyrical thread nods to life’s unpredictability, but the production refuses to linger, pushing forward with kinetic urgency.
Whether in cavernous festival sets or sweat-soaked club rooms, Will understands the mechanics of connection. The ego stays out of the way. The energy does the work.
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