
Musique Digs Weekly Playlist delivers a fresh mix of indie, rock, pop, soul, funk, rap, and more — hand-picked from over 2,000 new tracks each week by DJ Anthony De La Cruz. Discover the best new music without the digging.
Always the Good Stuff, Never the Noise.
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Artist: Karma Kid & Uffie
Tune: Emergency
Karma Kid and Uffie hit the panic button with a wink, folding rubbery house bass, clipped percussion and Uffie’s immortal cool-girl deadpan into a club cut that knows the emergency is probably the point. Sleazy in the chicest possible way, it sounds built for 2 a.m. decisions and zero follow-up questions.

Artist: Kiesza
Tune: All Star
Kiesza turns “All Star” into motivational pop with actual muscle, beginning with intimate control before opening into a gleaming, full-force payoff. The voice climbs, the production widens and suddenly the private pep talk has enough lift to carry an entire dance floor.

Artist: Kim Petras
Tune: Need For Speed (loki Remix)
Kim Petras hands “Need For Speed” to loki and watches the dashboard light up. The remix tightens the original into a faster, harder club rush—chrome-plated pop for bottle service, bad ideas and anyone who considers the speed limit a gentle suggestion.

Artist: Lil Naay
Tune: MOOD BRAZIL
Lil Naay steps into “MOOD BRAZIL” with the temperature already high, riding a compact urbano groove built on percussion, swagger and a chorus that refuses to stand still. Two minutes, one mission: keep the waist moving and the night out of anybody’s control.

Artist: Little Simz feat. JT
Tune: Game On
Little Simz and JT turn competition into chemistry on “Game On.” Simz brings the surgical control, JT adds the lacquered Miami bite and neither wastes a bar explaining why the room should move aside. It is a tag-team flex with the scoreboard already tilted.

Artist: Little Simz
Tune: That’s a No No
Little Simz closes the door with immaculate manners on “That’s a No No.” The beat stays lean, the delivery stays cool and every boundary lands like a verdict. No tantrum, no over-explaining—just elite-level refusal with bass underneath it.





