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Top 10 Songs of the Week
All Day Music ClubFeb 14, 20263 min read

Top 10 Songs of the Week

Every week, we sift through the noise to find the songs that actually made us stop, rewind, and feel something. No algorithms. No brand deals. Just ten tracks that earned their spot on our playlist this week.

Here's what's been on repeat.


1. Dijon — Higher

Dijon continues to operate in his own lane entirely. "Higher" is fragile and urgent at the same time, the kind of song that sounds like it was recorded in one take at 2am because the feeling couldn't wait until morning. There's a rawness here that most artists spend entire careers trying to fake. Dijon just walks in with it.

2. EsDeeKid — Omens

EsDeeKid brings a restless, borderless energy with "Omens." It moves between textures with a confidence that feels effortless, even when you know it isn't. The kind of track that rewards multiple listens because there's always something new hiding in the production.

3. Geese — Trinidad

Geese keep proving they're one of the most exciting rock bands working right now. "Trinidad" has that chaotic, art-punk energy where everything feels like it could fall apart at any moment but never does. Controlled chaos. The best kind.

4. Bad Bunny — Titi Me Pregunto

Bad Bunny doing vulnerable is always interesting. "Titi Me Pregunto" strips back the maximalism and lets the emotion lead. It's a reminder that behind the stadium tours and cultural dominance, there's a songwriter who knows how to make you feel small in the best way possible.

5. Mitski — I'll Change For You

Mitski could sing a grocery list and make it devastating. "I'll Change For You" carries that signature weight she's known for, where every word feels like it costs her something to say. It's heavy without being loud. Quiet devastation, as always.

6. Mk.gee — Dream Police

Mk.gee has been on an incredible run, and "Dream Police" is another example of why. There's a hazy, almost VHS quality to his sound that makes everything feel like a memory you're not sure actually happened. It's nostalgic for something that might not even exist. And that's exactly why it works.

7. Portraits Of Tracy — The Party

Portraits Of Tracy continue to build one of the most interesting catalogues in the Indian music scene. "The Party" grooves with an intention that's hard to ignore. Tight, deliberate, and impossible to sit still through.

8. J. Cole — The Villest

Cole sounds focused here. "The Villest" has a sharpness to it that reminds you why he's still in the conversation after all these years. No filler, no detours. Just bars and purpose.

9. Raf Saperra — Butchers Scale

Raf Saperra keeps pushing boundaries with "Butchers Scale," blending desi roots with experimental production in a way that feels natural rather than forced. There's an identity to his music that's hard to replicate. He's carving a space that didn't exist before him.

10. Black Country, New Road — Salem Sisters

Black Country, New Road make music that feels like reading someone's journal without permission. "Salem Sisters" is intimate, layered, and deeply human. The kind of song where every instrument feels like it's saying something the lyrics can't.


Honourable Mention

Elliot Smith — Wouldn't Mama Be Proud. Not a new release, but some weeks you just need Elliot. You know the feeling.


That's the ten. Agree? Disagree? Think we missed something? Let us know what's been on your playlist this week.

 


If this playlist speaks to you, you already get what All Day Music Club is about. We live at the intersection of music and culture, and we wear it too. Check out the full Wear ADHD collection at wearadhd.com.

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