Each week we update our best new song playlist with some of the most popular tracks, compiling the best songs each month in this segment. Here are the best songs from April 2025, alphabetical order.
Caroline – “Please tell me I didn’t know that.” [feat. Caroline Polachek]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rag3yuhkmhq
Caroline exploded back into view with “Total Euphoria,” creating a list of the best songs of March. Then came an even sweeter surprise. Caroline Polacek features the feature of “Tell Me Nevering That,” the second single on the British band’s sophomore album. Caroline 2. Caroline’s experimental music often wobbles at the edge of abstraction. This is a pattern reflected not only in the lyrics of the song, but also in Polacek’s treatment of decomposing pop melody. “Maybe I don’t want to be anyone/and I don’t want to be someone else,” she sings, not thinking about the nature as much as her desire for static identity. Casper Hughes’ vocals then soar to focus on layers of emotion and embodiment that are incredibly reminiscent of Yoncy. It may come from another world, but it’s getting too close to home.
Florry – “It was a movie at first, then it was a book.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voky6bidndm
How to restore things. I’m listening to “First It Was a Movie, Then It Was A Book.” It sounds like…that’s difficult do not have You will be paying attention. The single stretches to seven minutes, but as things start to feel a little loose, the guitar riffs will bring you back. Vocalist Franci Meduch embodies the character on the risk of breakdown. The narrator writes the film and then writes the song, but only while watching it do not have Based on their lives as the revelation strikes, “I saw myself in everyone, how did they make such a film?” Whatever it is, Florry has the same kind of gift.
Hotline TNT – “Julia’s War”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rylvtdo6smc
Raspberry Moon Marks recorded the full band Hotline TNT albums with full bands, including guitarist Lucky Hunter, bassist Haylen Trammel and drummer Mike Ralston. The lead single, “The War of Julia,” arrived as evidence of that unity, owning the “Nanana” chorus, shoving Andersen’s vocals into the mix. Please make sure you can’t make more lyrics.get it?) – Parallel. Even the most introverted shoegaze fans don’t have to come out of the shell and try hard at this catchy time.
Lana Del Rey – “Henry, come on.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndyy3nj7a0s
In other words, come on. Completely fingertiped guitar – delicate, but not raw. A light melody. String arrangement. Super visionbut taking extra clarity and rebellion. Lana Del Rey has seen this sad story unfold dozens of times, and although she has yet to settle (at least not revealed) on the title of her upcoming album, her lyrics are uneasy and just difficult to accept. “Some people come and they leave/ They just fly away/ Take your ass home/ Don’t even bother to explain it/ Don’t let it work/ Maybe when it’s gone, you can’t chase the ghost. But “Henry, Come On” does a very good job of summoning it. Why isn’t it reaching you?
Lord – “What was that?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1upozpmbm9y
Another way to ask, “What?” How was your fast year?? Lead single from Lord’s new album virgin It’s been four years since she’s, but really, it brings us back Melodrama Going back in time and even lyrically, she sings, “I was 17, so I gave you everything,” she sings. It’s a gut punch, but it’s not as important as the next line. “Now we wake up from our dreams, baby, what was it?” Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro’s have punches, but strangely muted. In “I still can’t see myself,” she sighs at the beginning of the song, and memories begin.
Pulp – “Spike Island”
https://www.youtube.com/watch? v = 27a1ugjx8u
“Spike Island” begins rather innocently, with tracking the core of inspiration. Jarvis Cocker is happy to draw out words Feelingto lead him to serious self-reflection about his time in the spotlight. It wasn’t that appropriate, so you can get a first glimpse into your first pulp album in 24 years. But this is pulp, and the more anthemic the cocker’s flow of consciousness connects the song. On the side, “And by the way, Spike Island” becomes a refrain. This is a complicated reference to a one-off gig in 1990, which achieved legendary status despite being plagued by technical issues and bad organizations. Cocker isn’t the aspect of fame, but one phrase of the DJ on the line screamed: “Spike Island, Come Alive!” The irony is that you can’t command emotions. If you’re lucky, you can simply enjoy it.
Stereo Love – “Air Trouble”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cg69oglydee
Certain universal anxiety simply hangs down into the air. For example, you can dance to the fun off-kills ditches of “airway troubles” in Stereo Love, and you may not realize that those troubles are related to “the fear of death” or “insatiable state of consumption.” It seems as soon as the group realizes that the fact that “paralysis is no longer working” is actually a good thing, the rhythm seems to progress. Criticism works, but playing with the thin lines between reality and the surreal future. Stereo Love has always been good at it, but they always suggest that this time it will be a little different. Judging from the outro of the song and the subsequent singles, that’s true.
Wet legs – “Catch these fists”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kjz89xyms4
If you’ve only heard one song on Wet Leg, you’ll expect the first single on your second album to be a raucous and bit of a tongue. In almost every respect, “Catch These Fist” is a natural return for Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers. However, the duo’s confidence sounds on a different level. Or maybe their terrible threats are a bit less joking than the filthy, razor-sharp riffs of the song. Singer Guitarists use their new confidence in success to not shout or polish the sounds. They tweet only lines like “He doesn’t get a cat, he got a boot.” Meanwhile, the song will be trapped in your head. He wears a hat on them.
Source: Our Culture – ourculturemag.com