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Pop music right now has a weird quality to it. You hear a brand new song, fresh release, trending everywhere, and somehow it feels like you’ve already lived with it. Not in a repetitive way, but in...
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There was a time when a song leaking early was every artist’s worst nightmare. It meant lost control, lost streams, and a rollout ruined before it even began. Now? It kind of feels like the...
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At first, it just sounded like another business deal. But this one actually means a lot more for how music works right now. When news came out that Britney Spears sold the rights to her music...
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Charli XCX has never been the type of artist to stay in one place creatively. From reshaping modern pop to experimenting with sound, mood, and identity, her work has always felt bigger than just...
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March 25, 2026
Something interesting is happening in music right now. Artists don’t really disappear anymore. They just… pause.Then suddenly they’re back, and somehow bigger than before.A lot of this comes down...
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March 25, 2026
Bubblegum pop is upbeat pop music with very strong hooks, simple lyrics, and a sweet. Songs are usually short, in a major key, with easy melodies, handclaps, and sing‑along choruses that get stuck...
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March 25, 2026
Something interesting is happening in music right now. Artists don’t really disappear anymore. They just… pause.Then suddenly they’re back, and somehow bigger than before.A lot of this comes down...
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March 25, 2026
Before PinkPantheress became a Grammy-nominated artist and one of the most talked about names in the industry, she started on her laptop with GarageBand, experimenting, recording vocals in her room...
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Pop music goes through phases. Some years the charts are full of emotional ballads, other times it’s glossy synth pop or moody R&B. When Tate McRae released “Greedy,” the track cut through that...
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If you’ve been scrolling through TikTok or Instagram lately, chances are you’ve heard a certain bouncy, chopped-up beat. That’s Jersey Club! a high-energy genre from Newark, New Jersey and it’s...
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Bad Bunny’s 2026 Super Bowl show didn’t just break viewing records—it confirmed that the “global sound” (Latin music, Afrobeats, Amapiano, Afro-fusion) is now the center of pop culture, not a side genre. If you’re learning to mix music, that means one thing: you have to get your low-end and drums right, because that’s where these styles live.
At the same time, artists like Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido, Rema, Tems, and Tyla have pushed Afrobeats and African pop from regional scenes into arenas, award shows, and global charts. Tyla’s Grammy win for “Water” in the new African music category was a clear sign that African genres aren’t just a trend and they’re being formally recognized and archived as part of global pop history as they should have been a long time ago.
So when you’re learning to mix global pop, Afrobeats, or Latin trap, you’re not just chasing a sound—you’re working inside a cultural wave built on groove, community, and dance.
Typical traits you’ll hear:
Afrobeats, especially, is built on swing and subtle push/pull in the groove, with drums that feel relaxed but still powerful. Latin trap and reggaetón lean on recognizable patterns (like the dembow rhythm), but they’re constantly updated with modern 808s and trap-style drums.
If your kick, 808, and percussion fight each other, the track stops feeling like global pop and starts feeling muddy.
A simple way to think about it:
Modern mixing tools make this much easier. Visual EQs help you see which sounds are fighting, and sidechain features let you shape the bounce in a few clicks. When you get this right, your tracks not only hit harder in the club but also connect to a global sound that’s reshaping what pop music is.