June 18, 2024
“YOU BLEW ME to stardust,” Glass Animals lead singer Dave Bayley sings on the U.K. band’s latest single “Tear in Space (Airlock).” The tantalizing track swirls with synths over a pulsating beat as...
Read moreJune 18, 2024
A couple of months ago, Blackpink’s Lisa signed a solo deal with RCA, and now it looks like she hopes to release new music soon. An Instagram Story on her official account links to pre-save links...
Read moreJune 15, 2024
UK rapper Central Cee has made headlines with his latest single, "Band4Band," achieving the fastest-selling rap single of the year. This milestone not only cements his status as one of the most...
Read moreJune 15, 2024
Forty years after they ran away with our hearts and into rock history, Bon Jovi is back with a reflective new album, Forever, taking stock of all the boys from New Jersey have accomplished.
Read moreJune 15, 2024
A decade on from his breakthrough Boiler Room DJ set, Canadian producer Kaytranada has cemented himself as a dance music powerhouse. His work blends the worlds of underground electronic sounds and...
Read moreJune 15, 2024
Central Cee, born Oakley Neil H.T. Caesar-Su on June 4, 1998, in Shepherd's Bush, London, has swiftly emerged as one of the most prominent voices in the UK drill scene. With his raw lyricism...
Read moreJune 15, 2024
Believe it or not, it’s already been a decade since the SoundCloud rap era first ignited, and we’re seeing the lasting impact of the moshpit-dwelling artists who defined the movement...
Read moreJune 15, 2024
Norwegian alt-pop sensation AURORA is set to release her highly anticipated fifth album, "What Happened To The Heart?" Following a series of successful projects—2016's "All My Demons Greeting Me....
Read moreJune 7, 2024
Tate McRae, born on July 1, 2003, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, has swiftly risen to fame as one of the most exciting young talents in the music industry today...
Read moreJune 7, 2024
Beyoncé has once again proven why she is a force to be reckoned with in the music industry with the release of her latest album, "Cowboy Carter."
Read moreJune 7, 2024
In a bold move to redefine how we discover and interact with music, Spotify and Amazon Music have each introduced groundbreaking AI-powered playlist generators...
Read moreJune 7, 2024
Charli XCX has opened up about her early struggles in the British music scene, revealing that she often felt like an outsider whose innovative ideas were dismissed as "silly or childish."
Read moreWhen JENNIE released “Like JENNIE,” it wasn’t just a comeback, it was a lesson in effortless power. Soft but sharp, understated but unforgettable, the track doesn’t ask for attention. It just naturally becomes the center of it.
In a music industry built on spectacle, JENNIE takes the opposite route: minimal sound, maximal presence. “Like JENNIE” isn’t about screaming louder, it’s about knowing you don’t have to.
“Like JENNIE” doesn’t open with fireworks, it opens with a mood. The production is lean and intentional: a steady beat, a few glimmering synths, and her voice right up front, unfiltered.
She’s not here to separate herself from BLACKPINK. She’s here to show us who she’s always been underneath it.
There’s no overexplaining in this track, just clean lines delivered with precision. “You could never do it like JENNIE” isn’t a brag. It’s a fact delivered in lowercase energy.
The whole song walks a fine line: it’s not aggressive, it’s aware. She’s not asking if she’s iconic. She already knows, and she knows you know, too.
“Like JENNIE” is filled with vocal restraint, and that’s what makes it powerful. There’s no effort to over-sing or overcompensate. Every word lands with cool composure.
She floats between rapping and singing, talking and taunting, all without raising her voice. It’s controlled without tension, and that kind of delivery only works when the artist knows exactly who they are.
The music video? Sleek, moody, and personal. No unnecessary flash, just a perfectly curated atmosphere that matches the song’s tone. Every outfit feels intentional. Every camera angle feels intimate, not invasive.
It’s less “look at me” and more “you’re already watching.”
In a market obsessed with going bigger, louder, faster, “Like JENNIE” slows it all down. It strips the solo formula of its usual theatrics and redefines it through subtlety and control.
JENNIE isn’t trying to prove anything. That’s the power. She lets the world come to her, and it does. Because no matter how soft the delivery, the message is loud: there’s only one JENNIE.
Watch the video again. Listen without distraction. Notice the details. “Like JENNIE” isn’t a track you blast once, it’s a track you grow into. And the more you hear it, the more you realize: this isn’t just a comeback, it’s a blueprint.
“Like JENNIE” is more than a single. It’s a quiet flex wrapped in melody. It doesn’t chase trends, it sets its own pace. It’s cool without the performance, iconic without the volume.
And just like JENNIE herself, it knows exactly what it’s doing.