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Adama Shares Hypnotic New Single “Euphoria”

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Adama is back with “Euphoria”, a track that mixes alternative R&B, ambient pop, and indie electronic vibes into something totally hypnotic. Deep basslines, dreamy synths, and melancholic melodies make this a song that sticks with you.

From the first beat, “Euphoria” pulls you in. It’s a perfect balance of vulnerability and strength, wrapped in those layered vocal textures that give it extra power. The double voices? They make everything hit even harder.

Music, for me, is about creating a space where listeners can connect, feel, and reflect. Euphoria is one of my most personal songs—an exploration of emotional highs and lows, wrapped in a hypnotic, synth-driven atmosphere.” Adama shares.

This track is a true experience. It blends experimental electronic beats and haunting ballad vibes, making it impossible to ignore. Whether you’re in deep thought or just vibing, it delivers.

If you love music that’s unique and emotional, “Euphoria” needs to be on your playlist.

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Dead Tooth Drops New Single ‘You Never Do Shit’

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In “You Never Do Shit,” Brooklyn’s Dead Tooth deliver a snarling, urgent post-punk single that distills their barbed energy into under four minutes of sharp-tongued wit and scuffed-up sonics. It’s a track that bristles with disdain—Zach Ellis’ vocal delivery is acidic, at times theatrical, and often more spoken than sung. There’s a punk rock immediacy here, but with the knowing wink of someone who’s watched the scene curdle and still wants to dance through the ashes.

The song began its life in a different medium—written for a fictional band on City on Fire—but the real-life iteration carries more weight. There’s a palpable satisfaction in Ellis’ decision to reclaim it, and that freedom seeps into every detail: the unkempt rhythm section, the jarring saxophone lines from John Stanesco, and the deliberate looseness that characterizes its structure.

Dead Tooth are at once participants and commentators in the culture they inhabit. Their songs are alive with noise, but also with intent—tracking the psychic hangover of nightlife, subcultural collapse, and underground scenes that burn bright and disappear too soon. Ellis’ lyrical observations land like tossed-off critiques, but underneath the smirk is something deeper, almost desperate: a desire for connection, even through chaos.

With their debut album looming, “You Never Do Shit” feels like a thesis statement. Not just of sound, but of ethos: reject slickness, embrace noise, tell the truth—even if it’s ugly. In a year when punk has mostly whispered or wandered, Dead Tooth has chosen to scream.

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