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Music Monday – Hitlist of the Week



Music Hitlist is sorted and brought for you. Music will lift your week as its stands to be a great start to the week. Dive yourself into the musical note of these songs to remove the Monday blues. The music will help you deal with the week’s stress. Music is enigmatic. It’s a culture in itself. It is self-liberating and is never dominating. Let us delve into the music reviews of these specific music pieces without further delay.


Love Me Like You Don’t Care by Amanda Stone


Amanda’s latest release Love Me Like You Don’t Care refreshes an exciting new look on the artist’s vision along with her sound. Her sound is filled with full of lush synths and razor-sharp electronics. The enigma that binds this respective track binding on to Amanda’s work. Her work however is of the carefree and melodic nature of her sound. The cherry on the cake has to be her commanding vocal performances. Love Me Like You Don’t Care is an unapologetic, sunny love song. The song has an irresistible sense of fun. It is characterized by a dynamic cutting edge that makes it feel like an intense summer anthem difficult to ignore.


How Do I Say Goodbye by Dean Lewis


How Do I Say Goodbye is a deprivation song. In the song, as explained by Dean Lewis, the vocalist is all about mourning his late father. The song stands unique as honestly, such a topic is not a particular theme we come across as often. The song is presented for Dean’s lost father. The addressee here is his dying father himself. He was someone who had a continual presence throughout his entire life irrespective of the odds of human life can venture through. Dean’s emotions are such that he can’t even consolidate How to say goodbye to his dad. Moreover, he is grabbing the opportunity by using this song. He wants to let him know as he puts it more frankly that he does not want him to die.


Betty (Get Money) by Yung Gravy


Yung Gravy is cherishing his winning season as he remains undefeated with his latest song Betty (Get Money).
The track is a play-off of Rick Astley’s song Never Gonna Give You Up. The music stands to be a hit of the 80s. The piece which acquired fame beyond its meme fame is quite iconic. He has Rewritten the chorus as

“Never gonna take no loss / Never gonna lose my sauce / All I know is chase this dough and get money,”.

Yung Gravy knows he is expensive. His arrogance is somehow always infectious.
The sort of reimagination in reimagining classics is a tactic. The tactic as proclaimed has saturated the market recently. Yung Gravy has a way of making “Never Gonna Give You Up” a brand-new experience. He framed this while maintaining Rick Astley’s essence. They both have a charm about them. The effort they put in is making this scarce sample. The clearance is pretty seamless.




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