8 New Songs Out Today to Listen To: Danny L Harle, Converge, and More

There’s so much music coming out all the time that it’s hard to keep track. On those days when the influx of new tracks is particularly overwhelming, we sift through the noise to bring you a curated list of the most interesting new releases (the best of which will be added to our Best New Songs playlist). Below, check out our track roundup for Tuesday, November 19, 2025.


Danny L Harle – ‘Crystallize My Tears’ [feat. oklou and MNEK]

Danny L Harle has announced a new album, Cerulean, which he described as “my debut album. It really is the big one.” It features Caroline Polachek, PinkPantheress, Clairo, Julia Michaels, and more; it’s out February 13, and the ethereal, upbeat ‘Crystallize My Tears’, featuring oklou and MNKEK, is out today.

Converge – ‘Love Is Not Enough’

Converge have announced their 11th studio album, Love Is Not Enough, sharing the filthy, dynamic title track along with the news. The track “explores what it means to remain empathetic and compassionate in the modern world,” according to vocalist Jacob Bannon. “A reckoning with who we are today and hope to be in the future — if we can fend off the scavengers.”

Lifeguard – ‘Ultra Violence’

Kai Slater’s project Sharp Pins is releasing a new album, Balloon Balloon Balloon, this Friday, and today he’s sharing new music from his other band Lifeguard. The new 7” maxi single, Ultra Violence / Appetite, out early next years, finds them ripping them through 11 tracks in 13 minutes. Lead track ‘Ultra Violence’ offers a glimpse into the record’s spontaneous, deconstructive approach. The band shared: “Recorded in Lifeguard’s Stulogulo, newly equipped with actually terrifying faces and friendly heroine carpet, plugged straight into the 8-track machine with the aid of the Dub soldiers, dirty mixing pots and Echoplexes, Lifeguard deliver these 11 tracks in under 15 minutes; 7 inches of LP-oriented fast and automatic music free from lingering, processing, over-thinking, or otherwise staving off release. The fully deterritorialized Ripped and Torn; the ripping and tearing of the band-aid.”

“This dub-abrasion Maxi-single is Lithographed for the new generation of cylinders,” their statement noted. “A thin Round wax prism carries that 30-second-torch of what shan’t be considered afterthoughts, rather deliberate bursts scaffolding: ULTRA VIOLENCE and APPETITE.”

Robber Robber – ‘Talkback’

Robber Robber have shared the exciting news that they’ve signed to Fire Talk, along with the razor-sharp, disorienting new single ‘Talkback’. It comes paired with a music video helmed by the band.

Fine – ‘Moment’

Following a mesmerizing guest spot on Smerz’s Big city life EDITS, Fine has returned with the drowsy, enchanting new song ‘Moment’. The moment in question is strange and fleeting, but that’s exactly the kind Fine Glindvad Jensen can turn into magic.

Plantoid – ‘Good for You’

Plantoid have dropped a new song, ‘Good For You’, a swirling, climactic preview of the band’s upcoming LP FLARE. “This track to us is an amalgamation of old and new; stylistically it pushes us forwards while retaining aspects of our progressive and experimental roots,” the UK trio commented. “It’s a journey of rebirth and processing emotions, of learning to create space for your feelings, then trying to feel good about it. The video is made by our friend Cali Titmas, filmed in the south west USA. It follows a ‘being’ landing on earth, emerging from another world to begin discovering life and nature for the first time as a ‘newborn.'”

Lucid Express – ‘Something Blue’

Lucid Express have announced their sophomore album, Instant Comfort, which is out February 20 via Kanine. Lead single ‘Something Blue’ is really something to get lost in.

Dirt Buyer – ‘Get to Choose’

Dirt Buyer, the project of Brooklyn-based musician Joe Sutkowski, has announced a new LP, Dirt Buyer II, arriving February 6, 2026 on Bayonet. It’s led by the soaring, emotive track ‘Get to Choose’, which is “about feeling very alone in a situation I didn’t want to be in, but not knowing how to communicate that,” according to Sutkowski. “It’s like being really, really tiny and screaming, but you’re too small and nobody can hear you.”

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