Ain’t no lie; ain’t no shade.
Clockwise from top left: Blackpink, Anyma & Ellie Goulding, Dom Dolla Tinashe & Disco Lines and Fred again..
Klawe Rzeczy
The past 12 months of dance music contained some both strange and exciting moments. One of the biggest moments in fact began in the last few days of 2024, when Anyma brought his technological feat of a show at Las Vegas’ technological feat of a venue, Sphere, a run that brought the producer to new heights of fame and put the genre into the most hyped new venue in the world.
Late May brought two events on opposite ends of the celebratory spectrum, when Ibiza’s latest mega-club [UNVRS] opened its doors, setting a new precedent for high-production clubbing on the island. And around the same time this venue opened, The Brooklyn Mirage stayed closed, as the space experienced zoning issue after zoning issue after a highly-touted remodel that ultimately was for nothing, as the space never opened its doors to fans this year. Its owners filed for demolition permits in October.
Equally shocking were the photos that came out of Boom, Belgium on July 16, when the fantastical stage of Tomorrowland proved to be equally as flammable, largely burning to the crowd just a day before the festival was scheduled to open. Incredibly, organizers were able to erect a makeshift stage and open for the weekend on time, in a valiant hustle applauded by fans, artists and industry folks around the world.
Meanwhile, clubs kept clubbing, festivals kept bumping, dance artists, agents and promoters pushed into new spaces, dance events set new standards for sustainability, we celebrated the classics, huge acts put on record-setting tours and electronic music lived across myriad Billboard charts as producers both huge and emerging released the music that powered the entire operation.
Many of these year-defining tracks, along with some of the more under-the-radar releases that resonated, are below as part of our staff’s picks for the 50 best dance tracks of 2015.

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Christine and the Queens and Cerrone, “Catching Feelings”

Image Credit: Courtesy You couldn’t ask for a much more natural classic-current disco match-up than legendary ’70s producer Mark Cerrone and Rahim Redcar of Christine and the Queens, two generations-separated forces who have both put in work repping for the genre at its classiest and most proficient. Obviously, their teaming for “Catching Feelings” resulted in a scorcher, with strutting drums, pulsing synth bass and Redcar’s enchanting directions: “Don’t be afraid of catching feelings with me.” Hey, given the alternative of things we could be catching in the dead of winter, this doesn’t sound worth even trying to resist. — ANDREW UNTERBERGER
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Blawan, “NOS”
What would happen if you threw E-40’s 2006 hyphy hit “Tell Me When to Go” and Aphex Twin in a blender then pressed the resultant recording to vinyl? It might actually sound something like “NOS,” the lead single from Blawan’s album SickElixir. The English producer ventures even further left-field in this live-wire number, a sludge of glitches and growling synth distortion engulfing clipped whispers and drums that beg to be replicated by pounding fists on a cafeteria table. Intended for a project that explores grief and family trauma, “NOS” is a raw and evocative realization of Blawan’s vision. — KRYSTAL RODRIGUEZ
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DJ E-Clyps, “Werk”
Though he’s been releasing music since the early ’10s, across a string of tracks in 2025, DJ E-Clyps sounded like he’s having more fun than ever. On “Werk,” a single included on his LP, HR Violation, the producer serves nursery rhyme but make it club, with a rewriting of the tale of “Three Little Pigs” to be about twerking (why not?). But it’s the fresh austerity of the production and composition — a repeated mononote synth stab, hand claps, and some bass — that reflect the bold confidence only a seasoned producer can command. — ZEL MCCARTHY
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Dimension & Karen Harding, “Guardian Angel”
As John Mayer once sang, “Belief is a beautiful armor.” So it is on “Guardian Angel,” a song that treats belief as steel that shields against struggle. Lifted by the stratospheric hook of English singer Karen Harding, “I believe / A guardian angel is here with me / Down on my knees / A guardian angel will set me free,” the track delivers a high-gloss hit of hope over Dimension’s bouncy drum & bass, with these elements together functioning like a 2025 version of the EDM era’s big, bright and most tear-jerking moments. — RACHEL NAROZNIAK
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Chaos in the CBD feat. Nathan Haines, “Love Language”
Chaos in the CBD have always carried jazz in their bloodstream, but “Love Language” lets it breathe right at the forefront. Taken from their debut album, A Deeper Life, the soulful single reconnects the brother-duo with fellow Kiwi luminary Nathan Haines, whose saxophone swirls among an elegant deep-house groove dotted with twinkling piano riffs. Like an act of service or physical touch, “Love Language” conveys softness and intimacy without a single word, and never rushes – just lingers like a night you never want to end. — KRYSTAL RODRIGUEZ
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Hamdi & Visages, “Lamp”
One of bass music’s most essential artists of the moments, Hamdi will basically send you cross-eyed with the electrical current of low-end at the center of his June track “Lamp.” This isn’t bass music of the metal-bending, drop-jockey variety, with the English/Tunisian artist instead serving a heady, stoney, psychedelic wobble for all of us who like to dance while standing in place with our eyes closed. The track comes from his altogether excellent Abomination EP, released amid a year when he low-key stole the show at festivals including Portola, Arc and Electric Forest. — KATIE BAIN
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PinkPantheress & Mochakk, “Noises”

Image Credit: Courtesy Following in the stilettoed footsteps of Charli XCX’s Brat remix album, ’00s U.K. dance lover PinkPantheress enhanced her 2025 Fancy That mixtape with Fancy Some More?, reimagining each track with an impressive mix of pop stars and DJs including Kylie Minogue, Anitta, Nia Archives and Mochakk. The latter Brazilian house wunderkid transformed the barely-two-minute drum ‘n bass burst “Noises” into a six-and-a-half minute languid and layered garage bop. Mochakk slows down Pantheress’ voice to eerie effect, emphasizing the paranoia of the song, evolving that last bit of the track into springy acid house that considers that eeriness and decides that, instead of hiding under the covers while home alone, it’s best to just have a dance party with your fears. — ANA YGLESIAS
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Hayla & Nelly Furtado, “Faded”
’00s icon Nelly Furtado — who scored some of her biggest hits with Timbaland—began an era of dancefloor rebirth in 2023 on her bad b–ch anthem with Dom Dolla, “Eat Your Man.” On “Faded,” Furtado links up with British dance vocalist Hayla, delivering a dancefloor power duet where their voices weave together and rise with a deep and driving beat produced by in-demand English duo Punctual, who’ve previously worked with RAYE and Jason Derulo. This one is about the feelings a crush ignites within you, even when they’ve long left you high and dry, which this song certainly does not. “Faded” reminds of the power female vocalists have brought to dance tracks for decades, and how two together can bring it to the stratosphere. – A.Y.
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horsegiirL, “material hor$e”
“Money, fame and power really changed me,” the horsehead-wearing Berlin-based DJ known as horsegiirL sings on “material hor$e” from the shamelessly-titled v.i.p.-very important pony EP. Beyond the cheek of an equine-impersonating DJ contemplating the meaning of life while admitting to enjoying the trappings of success (“I can order me some sugar in the middle of the night”), lies a delightfully galloping melodic happy hardcore-inspired beat, the likes of which propelled this showpony to the Polo Fields of Coachella, where the mystery of her human identity endured. — Z.M.
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Jazzy, “Closer to the Floor”
Sampling elements of DSK’s saucy 1990 single “What Would We Do,” Irish sensation Jazzy links with French producer Ankhoï and production duo Punctual for the Afro-house single “Closer to the Floor.” The group puts the production on a low simmer and lets Jazzy cook, her shimmery voice demanding “what would we do?” in a manner that’s more rhetorical seduction than actual query. The April track came amid a flurry of 2025 dance singles (“Moth to a Flame,” “Hypnotic,” “All This Time,” “High On Me”) that further established Jazzy as one of the scene’s essential new voices. — K. Bain
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Back Of My Mind, “SG Lewis”

Image Credit: Courtesy Though the title of his fourth studio album, Anemoia, translates to “nostalgia for a time you’ve never known,” on its lead single, SG Lewis traces the contours of memory and the all-consuming emotion it can evoke with the type of precision conferred not by imagination but lived experience. “Something takes a hold/ The feeling washes over me/ Leave the past behind/ But you’re always in the back of my mind,” he sings in a dulcet lilt over trance-tinged production. Upbeat and downright euphoric, “Back of My Mind” carries the weight of feeling like it’s part of the dance. For SG Lewis, it always is. — R.N.
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Sofia Kourtesis, “Corazón”
The Peruvian producer’s August EP Volver lifts off with “Corazón.” If you don’t understand Spanish, the airport intercom announcements that bookend the track might be lost on you, but translating the lyrics finds Kourtesis lamenting that “I take all the flights to be with you in full/ Distance never changes the damn anxiety” before the track hits a soaring chorus in which she wails “separate” over and over. The magic trick in this one is how this brightly lush house track feels so much like connection, like a heart taking off towards the sky. — K. Bain
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Indira Paganotto & Nile Rodgers, “Arte Come Amante”
This loosie single from emergent Spanish psytrance producer Indira Paganotto and dance world diplomat Nile Rodgers is an absolute kitchen sink of ideas, as the pair (who as the story goes met at a party in Miami and subsequently got into the studio together) toss in bits of Spanish guitar, Latin rhythms, hand claps, psy, electro, techno and finally, a blistering guitar solo from Rodgers. It all gets along like a house on fire, as these two unlikely collaborators clearly do too. — K. Bain
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Honey Dijon & Chlöe, “The Nightlife”
Past and present, underground and mainstream: Honey Dijon brings worlds together. On “The Nightlife,” the Chicago producer (and Beyoncé collaborator) joins forces with pop-R&B singer Chlöe Bailey to deliver a devotional to club culture and the sweaty communion it fosters. Purring and crooning over Dijon’s acid-bubbling, shadowy groove, Bailey interpolates “Nite Life,” the 1994 classic by late house icon Kim English, spinning the listener “‘round and ‘round” with her beneath the red lights of their refuge. “The Nightlife” introduces English and her work to a new generation of club devotees, and is also a first taste of Dijon’s upcoming third album. — K.R.
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Moon Boots, “Sunshine”
Leave it to Moon Boots to capture the feeling of endless summer. Since his early-‘10s rise as part of the French Express collective, the Chicago-schooled producer has consistently churned out modern house delights (i.e. “So Precious,” “Come Back Around”) that could wipe clouds from the sky. “Sunshine,” his aptly-titled single with Lyric Jones, beams with his signature melodic and emotional warmth while Jones delivers sugar-sweet, lovestruck vocals. Debuted by the pair at this year’s Coachella, it already sounds like a perennial: carefree funkiness and hand-clapping joy that makes the world feel a little lighter. — K.R.
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2hollis, “flash”

Image Credit: Courtesy As a dance great once stated: Cameras ready, prepare to flash. The lights are definitely on 2hollis for “Flash,” a transfixingly strobelit banger that packs an intoxicating mixture of sex, glamour, intimacy, danger and paranoia into its 2:44 runtime — particularly once the beat speeds up and explodes into a hissing, bleating chaos of bleeping synths and hammering drums. More than anything, it sounds like becoming famous: exciting and seductive and absolutely f—king terrifying. “Holli wanna be a star,” the rapper-singer professes. Let’s hope he really is ready for those flashing lights. — A.U.
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Myd, “Song for You”
Winding up a sample from short-lived ’80s Florida funk outfit Popcorn, the Ed Banger-signed French producer creates a delectable confection with his similarly titled “Song for You.” The song’s skipping groove, popping bass and infectiously looped refrain is such a winner that towards the end, when it breaks into an eight-count of just a bass drum thump — one that’ll make you reflexively scream “Ooh, baby, I feel right, the music sounds better with you!” — you’ll realize that it’s actually been reminding of you of Stardust’s pitch-perfect lone single the entire time. — A.U.
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Sam Gellaitry, “Start Up a Rumour”
If you heard a rumour that Scottish producer Sam Gellaitry was making some of the best dance-pop out right now, you heard right. One of the highlights from 2025’s Anywhere Here Is Perfect, “Rumour” finds the singer-songwriter-producer preaching the relationship benefits of actually getting the bad blood out in the open: “I know it sounds strange but a little frustration/ Keeps us from being toxic,” he opines. You might agree or disagree with his position, but there’s no chance you’ll take issue with his delivery method: When he’s singing so sweetly over such a neon-glowing synth riff, there’s really no need to argue in the first place. — A.U.
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Calvin Harris & Jessie Reyez, “Ocean”
There’s a swell of lore behind Calvin Harris’ September track, a snippet of which was originally shared in 2024 with vocals from Miley Cyrus. But the singer apparently floated out to sea before she could complete the project, with Harris recruiting Jessie Reyez as the replacement vocalist. But nothing on “Ocean” feels like a compromise, as Harris gives us some of his softer side (as also revealed on March’s country-leaning “Smoke the Pain Away”) with a minor key, guitar-flecked track that stays a bit melancholic even after the beat drops. — K. Bain
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Blond:ish & Black Circle, “Higher”
“I used to make darker music, because I was living in after hours,” Blond:ish told Billboard of the sound behind her second album, Never Walk Alone. “But my music is definitely not dark these days. You can feel that, and it’s because every decision I make with my music is about answering the question ‘How can I help people live their best lives?’” Album single “Higher” embodies that new mindset: the dancing staccato strings, the heartrate-elevating build, and a pause at the summit – “You take me higher, baby!” – followed by drums punching your worries out of the air. It’s the kind of euphoric experience that illustrates why dance floors can be therapy with strobe lights and a sound system. — K.R.
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Lyric, “Here for the Party”

Image Credit: Courtesy While the internet was consumed with the concept of reheated nachos, Lyric demonstrated how to cook them right the first time. By looping a sample previously best known as a secondary vocal line in a video game soundtrack track by K-pop producer Cosmograph, interlaying it with several other samples (including a choice allusion to an old Ludacris record), “Here For The Party” plays with our expectations of what “serious” techno can do. Over a hypno bassline and precision percussion, Lyric compels us to the function and most importantly, the dancefloor. — Z.M.
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Mau P, “Like I Like It”
Mau P (with his frequent collaborator Robert Pronk) set the tone for the whole damn summer with this May scorcher, a squelchy, winding clubland come-hither that manages to sound really sexy (and uh, climactic), and also a touch spooky, too. “Like I Like It” samples its titular lyrics from a 1985 Aurra disco track of the same name, dials up their BPM, pitches up the vocals and then lets ‘er rip over a thumping, acid-ey production that sounds like when the party’s going strong at 3:00 a.m. All in all, one of the building blocks of Mau P’s star-making year, during which the Dutch producer traversed continents and clubs while becoming one of the major new faces of popular dance music. — K. Bain
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Sudan Archives, “A Bug’s Life”
Throughout The BPM, the third LP from Sudan Archives, the artist makes no secret of her affection for clubby rhythms. On “A Bug’s Life,” the artist integrates her earlier identity as an alt-pop violinist with her chops as a dance producer. Sing-talking lyrical wit like “Karma’s a mistress/ She pays back what she owes with taxes and interest” as 808s thump under piano chords, the tune is a ’90s house-inspired celebration of independent women (parts 1 and 2), replete with an original violin countermelody flourish performed by Sudan Archives herself. — Z.M.
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Prospa feat. Kosmo Kint, “Love Songs”
House music is a universal language, and “Love Songs” plays like proof that English duo Prospa speak it fluently. Vocals from Berlin-based vocalist Kosmo Kint add velvet cushion and warmth to Prospa’s retro polish, softening the resignation of a hook that’s echoed across dance floors for months now: “It’s been a long night/ Don’t wanna hear your love songs.” It’s moodiness with a pulse, jadedness made sexy. More than that, though, it’s a switch that’s helped flip Prospa from an act on the come-up Stateside to one that’s decidedly arrived. — R.N.
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Kettama, DJ Heartstring, KLP, “If You Want My Heart”
“If U Want My Heart” offers the highest compliment a lover could give: “You feel like home to me.” The confession tumbles forth in an emphatic bubbling over of emotion, lyrics forming in a poetic and abstract stream of consciousness. Energy, unbridled. Restraint, shed. Euphoric, trance-forward production stokes the soul on this mystical, vapor-lit cut, where the vibe is unabashedly “If U Want My Heart,” be willing to bare yours, too. Of all the standouts on Kettama’s debut album, Archangel, this might just be the one fans most ardently embraced — and deservedly so. — R.N.
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Soulwax, “All Systems Are Lying”

Image Credit: Courtesy By 2025 the line between what’s real and what’s imaginary has been blurred so far beyond the point of making sense, it’s easier to imagine everything coming through your screens is a conspiracy, or at the very least, an advertisement. This is the space within which the legendary Belgian dance-rock duo Soulwax delivered its first full-length album in 21 years. The whole thing plays as a danceable take-down of the modern existential crisis, and the title track exerts that feeling with wobbly synth beats, stabbing melodies and a robotic vocal mantra that promises whatever you’re experiencing with your friends at the club is the only thing in this world worth trusting. — KAT BEIN
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Barry Can’t Swim, “About to Begin”
A centerpiece track on Scottish producer Barry Can’t Swim’s 2025 album Loner, “About to Begin” is a curiously titled jam, given how it very much sounds like action in progress. Slapping drums mix with tapping percussion and belching bass to propel its air-rad drop — featuring what appears to be a fragment of the legendary “Think” break — into the stratosphere, as a voice ambiguously intones, “It’s just about to begin.” If this is merely the warm-up, all we can say is watch out for when the main event gets here. — A.U.
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John Summit feat. Cloves, “Focus”
John Summit’s 2025 release schedule was more contained than last year, when he dropped his debut full-length. But he made each of the tracks he did release this year into a moment, beginning with January’s “Focus,” an indie electronic/tech house track that contains some of the most sophisticated and resonant songwriting of the entire Summit catalog. A collaboration with Australian vocalist Cloves, “Focus” swells and breaks in de facto dance world fashion, but it’s the undercurrent of melancholy, the insistent “beep boop beep” synth and those lush strings that made this one worth returning to. — K. Bain
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Alok & Kylie Minogue, “Last Night I Dreamt I Fell in Love”
On Valentine’s Day, Kylie fans woke up to a surprise house collab with Brazilian producer Alok. That night, this tune premiered in the opening show of Minogue’s Tension World Tour in Perth, Australia. Co-penned with J Hart and Sarah Hudson, two of Minogue’s more recent go-to pop writers, with production assists from stealth studio weapons Avedon, OHYES and Zhone, the two-minute ode to somnambul-lusting showcases rarely heard pop sensibilities from Alok, enhanced by the pop goddess’s incandescent joie de vivre and her unfaltering faith in love on the dancefloor. — Z.M.
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Charlotte de Witte feat. Comma Dee, “The Heads That Know”
The vocals here from Welsh artist Comma Dee are ostensibly a rap, but damn if they don’t function like an incantation too. His rapid delivery will make you nod your head in time, as the brain is forced to absorb that beat pattern and the even faster one under it, in the form de Witte’s skittering production. Built largely from a rolling bass and dry percussion, the Belgian producer ultimately clears most of the elements away to leave space for us to just get lost in the kickdrum. Maybe the most accessible track from her excellent November debut album, and certainly one of the coolest. — K. Bain
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Four Tet, “Into Dust (Still Falling)”

Image Credit: Courtesy Leave it to Four Tet – the legendary producer whose wildly eclectic catalog includes some of the best folktronica ever made – to bring the hushed folk of Mazzy Star’s 1993 cut “Into Dust” to the dancefloor. No producer understands how to fuse the ethereal and the primal quite like Four Tet, who seamlessly undergirds the wispy vocals and plucked guitars of Mazzy Star’s original with pounding percussion and twinkling synths for an entrancing result that faithfully honors Mazzy Star while completely reimagining it. — E.R.B.
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Skream & Partiboi69, “Pound Town”
Who said romance is dead? U.K. legend Skream and edgelord extraordinaire Partiboi69 blew us away with this tongue-in-cheek club heater. It’s the kind of Eurotrashy energy that made the early 2000s so mindlessly fun, but here draped in the modern bass hues and production techniques that make these two producers such stalwarts of the scene. It reminds us all to stop taking the dancefloor so seriously, even as it proves these two clowns never come to play when it comes to working the studio. — K. Bein
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Kaytranada, “Don’t Worry Babe/I Got U Babe”
First, listen to this one on a pair of good headphones and feel how the sound design shakes your neural pathways in its first three seconds. Then consider that same level of studio flexing is laced throughout “Don’t Worry Babe/I Got U Babe,” the aural equivalent of melting into a long hug from a good friend as it insists its titular affirmations over and over. Coming from Kaytra’s Ain’t No Damn Way!, this one slides into the set after the the synth-forward and sonically colder “Goodbye B–ch!,” entering with the warmth of sunlight and the swagger of someone who knows there’s really no reason to worry. — K.Bain
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Jamie xx & Erykah Badu, “F.U.”
The origins of this track — included on the 2025 repack of Jamie xx’s 2024 album, In Waves — are blessed with the kind of lore dance music fans deserve but rarely get. After capturing Erykah Badu’s melodic rant against malfunctioning sound equipment on his phone during an extended technical issue during her Primavera Sound set in 2019, Jamie concocted a backing track worthy of a queen who has somehow never recorded a club record. Finished and released with her blessing, on “F.U.,” we hear Badu chanting the titular phrase to anthemic effect. — Z.M.
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Tourist feat. Juliana Barwick “Invisible”
“I think that music is something that can bring hope to people, so it’s special stuff music,” Juliana Barwick says on the lead track from Tourist’s December album Music Is Invisible. “And it’s one of the, well I think it’s the only artform isn’t it, that is invisible? All other artforms tend to work on a very visual plane. The thing about music is that if it’s something that talks to you, it’s something that can really get in deep, really under your skin.”
With this observation as its guiding philosophy, the English producer builds a trance production that grow increasingly larger in scope, ambition and potency over its five-and-a-half minutes, likely moving you physically (and probably emotionally too), even though, as it insists, you can in fact never see it. — K. Bain
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Sammy Virji, “I Guess We’re Not the Same”
One of the fastest-rising U.K. dance producers kicked off his 2025 with this heart-racing garage thumper, a much-anticipated full release after being dropped in his Boiler Room set the previous October. The elements of this track are simple — a rapidly hopscotching beat, low-groaning bass, and a ghostly female voice wailing, “I guess we’re not the same, anymore/ I guess we’re not the same, same” — but like classic less-is-more dance-pop predecessor “Better Off Alone,” the universes of emotion suggested within them add up to something both deeply unsettling and thoroughly satisfying. – A.U.
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Amelie Lens & Charlotte de Witte, “One Mind”

Image Credit: Courtesy On “One Mind,” Belgian techno titans Charlotte De Witte and Amelie Lens unite in their love of moody, sultry dancefloor bangers. The nearly-six-minute track opens with haunting whispers — both of their voices are layered together across the two-track EP — nodding to to sonic and cognitive unity indicated by its title. 13 seconds in, the banging techno four-four kick — a de Witte essential — comes in, later mixing with Lens’ favored winding synth loops and then a sprinkling of acid flourishes, the latter elements core to both of their sounds. The dynamic pair joint-released the EP on both of their labels in February, in the midst of their triumphant sold out, three-night run of massive B2B shows in their home country of Belgium. — A.Y.
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Tame Impala, “End Of Summer”
Kevin Parker might have a problem with perfectionism and/or procrastination — “I waited till the end of summer and I ran out of time,” he laments on the lead single to 2025’s Deadbeat. He’s singing about a relationship, but he might also be singing about his new album, the second straight Tame Impala LP to come half a decade after the last one. If so, in his case, pressure makes bangers: The tension builds throughout “End of Summer” as Parker moans about his unrealized romantic intentions, the pulsing beat thumping like the ticks of the clock he’s racing against. But by the time the song explodes in a cathartic cacophony of laser synths, you realize what his prospective partner also hopefully will in time: Tame Impala is always worth the wait. — A.U.
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Dom Dolla, “No Room for a Saint”
Coming from the white-hot F1 The Movie soundtrack, “No Room For a Saint” was a relentless — and yes in fact driving — late summer electro anthem. The track managed to maintain a cool and hooky, synth pop sensibility as it also incorporated the sort of acid-y production flourishes that are a key element of Dolla’s toolkit, coming in a year when the Aussie producer also clocked another big hit (“Dreamin’” with Daya) and generally cemented his position as a global festival headliner. — K. Bain
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Anyma feat. Ellie Goulding, “Hypnotized”
“Hypnotized” premiered with the grandeur of the Sphere Las Vegas’ 160,000-square-foot LED screen, but its eye-popping CGI and a live performance from Ellie Goulding herself were still only part of its surprise. The second single from the then-forthcoming final album in Anyma’s Genesys series thrust the producer, best known for melodic house and techno, into his most commercial and accessible lane yet. The pivot won him his first No. 1 on the Dance/Mix Show Airplay chart, with this high-powered dance/pop crossover doubling as an inflection point — or maybe it’s the other way around. — R.N.
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BLACKPINK, “Jump”

Image Credit: Courtesy of YG Entertainment “I would say it’s speed, garage and trance, and the bass line of the drops is almost like Goa trance. It goes into drill and Jersey Club. The fill is from a Brazilian genre called from Bahia. The outro is like hard techno, and the beginning drums are more Euro-pop from the ’90s, with the guitar line and the whistle.” So said “Jump” writer Diplo when breaking down the absolute grab bag of elements he blended into BLACKPINK’s July comeback single. The barnstorming banger welcomed the K-Pop titans to the club, and made debuting at No. on the Global 200 and Global Excl. U.S. charts look as easy a hop, skip and a jump. — K. Bain
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Fred again.., Skepta & PlaqueBoyMax, “Victory Lap”
The standout track from Fred again.. and Skepta’s August EP Skepta..Fred – a seismic summit of dance’s hottest producer and the U.K. grime legend – flips Doechii and Rico Nasty’s “Swamp Bitches” into a menacing dubstep gem. By now, Fred has established himself as one of electronic music’s most versatile producers — and here, he creates a perfect backdrop for Skepta, who shows up with characteristically blistering bars (“I hear them say we sold out/ Yeah, we sold out everything except humble pie/ One slice cut a man down to size”). While “Victory Lap” ultimately got four remixes by Fred himself, it’s the original that remains victorious. — E.R.B.
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Ninajirachi, “iPod Touch”
Remember when you were a fresh-faced teenager and your computer was your entire world? Remember when finding a new song you loved felt like being let in on a secret? Remember fall mornings that felt full of potential, day-dreaming with your headphones in, staring out the bus window? Ninajirachi’s “iPod Touch” sounds exactly like that, spinal tapping into the very essence of your best yesterdays with pastel chords, guttural buzzsaw synths and a pulsing four-on-the-floor that marches as relentlessly as the passage of time. Listen to this one with your eyes closed and see where in your past it takes you. It just might inspire a better tomorrow, today. — K. Bein
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Skrillex, “Voltage”
Did you have Skrillex going back to dubstep on your 2025 bingo card? His album F*ck U Skrillex You Think Ur Andy Warhol but Ur Not!! <3 is a triumphant return to form for the guy who changed the trajectory of American electronic music with nothing but a laptop and an asymmetrical haircut. “Voltage” feels like (and if the rumors are true, actually is) a long-buried treasure dug up from the sands of time. His emo-falsetto vocals bleed heartfelt toward a crunchy, wonky, screeching dubstep drop only Skrillex can deliver. The track is beautiful, whimsical and unforgiving all at once, making it feel as if the spirit of 2010 is alive in all of us, at least for its two minutes and nine seconds. – K. Bein
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Rochelle Jordan, “Ladida”
“Who is Rochelle Jordan?” asks a current billboard on Los Angeles’ Sunset Blvd. On “Ladida,” a standout from her third album Through The Wall, the British-Canadian singer answers loudly and proudly. “All these sons, I watch ’em run around,” she sing-raps in her honeyed-whiskey tone. It’s an earned flex from an artist who recalls her grind from “back in ‘09” to the spotlight, and now revels in the spoils (“Donatella on the dress, Prada on the purse”). With a sticky, syllabic hook that nods to Crystal Waters’ “Gypsy Woman (She’s Homeless),” Jordan continues the rich lineage of Black pop-dance divas – and after performing “Ladida” on Good Morning America, the rest of the world is finally catching up. — K.R.
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Chris Lake & Amber Mark, “In My Head”

Image Credit: Courtesy “Chemistry” is more than the title of Chris Lake’s debut album – it’s key to the many successful collaborations he’s shared in over his decades-long career. And in a year packed with such team-ups (Skrillex, Bonobo, Disclosure, MPH and more), his union with R&B singer Amber Mark on “In My Head” still stands out. The Chemistry single is a late-night daydream you can dance to, melding woozy house grooves with Mark’s smoldering vocals to capture the cheek-flushing delirium of infatuation. A return to Lake’s melodic roots, “In My Head” is proof he can color with emotion without sacrificing club energy. — K.R.
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FKA twigs, “Perfectly”
2025 was FKA twigs’ year. Her transcendent rave-inspired third studio album Eusexua would’ve been plenty, but she turned it into collective catharsis on tour and later released 15 more wonderfully weird tracks from her electronic era. One such bop is “Perfectly,” which she memorably debuted ahead of its mid-July release during her jaw-dropping show. It’s propelled by a skittering, banging bassline produced by Eusexua beat architect Koreless and newcomer Xquisite Korpse, and, as her first new music following the stellar January album, proved the state of eusexua is on-going. The lyrics confront perfectionism, at times sung so fervently and interwoven with the beat they’re indecipherable, like frenzied inner-dialogue. — A.Y.
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Lady Gaga, “Abracadabra”
Within hours of this song’s premiere during the Grammys telecast (in the form of a MasterCard commercial), Little Monsters saturated social media, showcasing the choreography, analyzing costume colors, and declaring that Gaga was back. Indeed, she’d never been far from the pop culture proscenium, but the darkpop of “Abracadabra” was a well-timed return to the dancefloor. When the track drops for a moment in the video to reveal the diegetic sound of Gaga’s dancers singing and shouting in a circle before Mother Monster stands in the middle to scream — we all felt that. — Z.M.
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PinkPantheress, “Illegal”
Is a beat this good illegal? It feels illegal. In just two and a half minutes, the British sensation delivers the best track of her career, a propulsive garage banger with shimmering bursts of synthesizers and a sneakily memorable vocal performance. Naturally, the earworm – quickly recognizable within a couple seconds – went viral on TikTok, but unlike many things that happen on the platform, “Illegal” proved to be far more than a passing fad, with its synth clouds and lyrics about crushing on someone so hard it feels outside the confines of the law now synonymous with 2025 itself. — E.R.B.
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Disco Lines & Tinashe, “No Broke Boys”

Image Credit: Courtesy of Warner Music Group “I think it’s just catchy as hell,” Tinashe told Billboard of her and Disco Lines’ runaway smash “No Broke Boys.” While there’s certainly lot of production prowess and vocal agility built into the song, sometimes it really is as simple as a bouncy beat and a melody you can’t get out of your head. First coming to life when Disco Lines played it during a late night set at EDC Las Vegas in May, the collab — a take on a track of the same name from Tinashe’s 2024 album Quantum Baby — became a Dance/Electronic Songs No. 1, a Hot 100 crossover hit and a popular choice for song of the summer and ultimately, of the year. — K. Bain
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