We Speak Music
Mishka’s “Viva la Revolución” Feels Like A Song Meant To Be Played Loud
Some tracks ask for headphones. “Viva la Revolución” feels like it wants open windows, sunlight, and the volume turned up enough for the neighbours to hear it.
Mishka leans fully into that energy here, taking what started as an acoustic protest song and turning it into something much bigger. With Prince Fatty behind the production, the track opens up into a rich roots reggae anthem that feels warm, alive, and built to move.
The message is clear from the title, but the song does not rely on big slogans alone. It pulls from history, resistance, and lived experience, tying names like Mandela and Martin Luther King Jr. into something that still feels current rather than nostalgic.
What helps is that Mishka never sounds like he is trying too hard to make a point. His delivery is calm, confident, and full of conviction. That makes the sharper political lines hit harder because they come from honesty, not performance.
There is also something hopeful running through the whole thing. Even when the lyrics deal with violence, injustice, and moral collapse, the song keeps reaching toward healing instead of cynicism. That balance gives it real depth.
It is a protest song, sure, but it is also a song about people choosing not to give up on each other. That part feels just as important.
We Speak Music
VAAST drops “Remember These Days” and it seriously feels like the future of French pop
France has given the world some of its biggest electronic icons. From Daft Punk to DJ Snake and David Guetta, French artists have shaped global music culture for decades. But lately, finding a track that mixes real emotion, cinematic vibes and dance energy all at once? Pretty rare.
That’s exactly where Vaast steps in.
His new single “Remember These Days” is an addictive mix of modern French electronic production and timeless pop songwriting. Think emotional melodies, huge atmosphere, deep basslines and the kind of track you want both in your headphones at 2AM and blasting during a late-night drive.
The production blends layered synths, marimba-inspired textures, synthetic African vocal elements and immersive cinematic energy. And yes, there’s even inspiration pulled from Avatar, the legendary movie universe that defined a whole cultural era. That influence gives the track its futuristic-but-nostalgic feeling, like a memory from the future.
