August 7, 2025
Lil Yachty isn’t shy about showing love for his close friend Drake. During a recent appearance on the MdFoodieBoyz podcast, the Some Sexy Songs 4 U artist labeled the Toronto superstar...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
Ed Sheeran has brought back actor Rupert Grint for an upcoming music video, marking their first collaboration since 2011's viral "Lego House" visual. The new project accompanies Sheeran's track...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
To improve real-time song discovery, Spotify is now testing a new feature dubbed "DJ Now Takes Requests." The feature adds a layer of crowd participation to streaming experiences by allowing users...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has spoken out about his fallout with drummer Zak Starkey, calling the musician’s post-departure comments “incredibly upsetting.” Starkey, son of Beatles legend Ringo...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
Fujii Kaze’s “Love Like This” isn’t your average love song, it’s a shimmering, soulful glide through the kind of romance that doesn’t just sweep you off your feet, it levitates you. With effortless...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
Laufey’s “Lover Girl” isn’t just a song, it’s a soft, sweeping confession wrapped in strings, jazz chords, and the kind of vulnerability that makes you want to cry into your oat milk latte. With...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
When Saweetie hit the mic with her usual sparkle and sass, fans expected bops, but what they didn’t expect was boffum. Yes, boffum. The internet has been shaken, stirred, and straight-up meme-ified...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
After years of teasing, manifesting, and fans quite literally breaking down over one-song discographies, Jennie finally pulled the ultimate main character move, she dropped a full solo album. No...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
In a heartfelt social media post, Freese explained that his decision to leave Nine Inch Nails was one of the hardest of his career. At the time, he and his wife were expecting their third child...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
Meet Ty Myers, a teen from Texas who is transforming the concept of a country performer in 2025, music fans. Honky-tonk roots, modest ambition, and a popular TikTok moment from 2023 inspired his...
Read moreAugust 5, 2025
Demi Lovato is back in the pop scene with her latest single, “Fast,” which brings her back to the club-ready, EDM-infused beats that fans loved in hits like “Cool for the Summer” and...
Read moreAugust 1, 2025
a deeper heartbeat emerged beneath the surface: the voice of Rumi— performed and co-written by the Korean-American singer-songwriter Ejae.
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.