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SHAB Unveils Official Music Video For ‘Skin & Bones’

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Artistic portrait of singer SHAB wearing a crown and gold wings, promoting her single "Skin & Bones" and its personal history-driven music video.

How the “Skin & Bones” Music Video Translates SHAB’s Personal History Into a Visual Narrative

The music video for Skin & Bones opens by framing the song through SHAB’s own words, using on-screen text to establish the personal context behind its creation. The opening statements reference the period in late 2019, when SHAB’s career was beginning and her husband was critically injured in a car accident, followed by months focused on recovery. From there, the video moves between images of the accident and quieter moments of daily life, intercut with scenes of SHAB singing. This structure creates a clear contrast between intimacy and disruption, allowing the visual narrative to reflect the emotional foundation of the song without embellishment. Rather than repositioning the track, the video clarifies its origin, reinforcing how personal history remains central to Skin & Bones across both its original version and the Damon Sharpe remix context.

Shared Context Between SHAB and Damon Sharpe at the Point of Creation

The relationship between SHAB and Damon Sharpe predates the remix, which gives the visual and musical continuity of Skin & Bones a clear foundation. Damon Sharpe was involved during the original writing process, giving him direct awareness of the circumstances that shaped the song before it was translated into other formats. This shared context matters in the way both the remix and the music video unfold, as neither attempts to reinterpret the song’s meaning or redirect its narrative. Instead, the video’s restrained visual language and the remix’s measured production choices reflect an understanding of the song’s emotional boundaries. Because both contributors were present at the song’s inception, the final result feels aligned rather than additive, allowing Skin & Bones to move across visual and electronic spaces without losing its original intent.

Reframing Skin & Bones as a Continuous Creative Statement

Taken together, the music video and the Damon Sharpe remix position Skin & Bones as an evolving work rather than a fixed release. The video grounds the song in lived experience through its restrained visual narrative, while the remix allows it to exist within electronic settings without separating it from that context. Neither format seeks to redefine the track. Instead, each extends the same emotional framework through different forms of expression. By maintaining consistency between image, vocal delivery, and production approach, SHAB reinforces a creative throughline that prioritizes honesty over reinvention. In this sense, Skin & Bones functions as a single statement that moves across music, remix, and visual storytelling without losing coherence, reflecting an approach where personal history remains central regardless of format.

Where Skin & Bones Sits Within SHAB’s Broader Catalogue

Within SHAB’s body of work, Skin & Bones stands out for the clarity with which personal experience is carried across different formats. The music video makes its origin explicit through narrative and imagery, while the Damon Sharpe remix extends the song’s reach without altering its emotional foundation. Rather than existing as an isolated moment, the track reflects an approach that prioritizes continuity between songwriting, production, and visual storytelling. This alignment positions Skin & Bones as part of a broader artistic trajectory in which collaboration and format are used to support meaning rather than redefine it. In doing so, SHAB reinforces a catalogue shaped by lived experience, where reinterpretation functions as extension rather than departure.

Skin & Bones remains grounded because each format stays aligned with the same emotional center. The music video presents the song’s origin through direct narrative and restrained imagery, while the Damon Sharpe remix allows it to move into electronic settings without detaching from that context. Rather than reshaping the track for effect, SHAB maintains continuity across music, visual storytelling, and collaboration, reinforcing an approach where reinterpretation functions as extension rather than substitution.

With 13 years in the EDM scene, Preetika has built a strong presence around festivals, club culture, and electronic music. Based in Bangkok, she covers all things EDM in Thailand and beyond, with a focus on both local and international talent. She has attended major festivals including Tomorrowland, Ultra Japan, and Creamfields Hong Kong. Since working as a writer for EDM House Network, she has interviewed artists such as Blasterjaxx, James Hype, W&W, R3HAB, Alok, and many others. Her experience and consistent presence in the scene make her a trusted voice for EDM coverage.

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New EDM Friday June 5: Alesso, Skrillex, Hardwell & More

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Alesso and Ryan Tedder sitting on a cream sofa in a studio-style room for New EDM Friday June 5, featuring Alesso, Skrillex, 4B, and more.

New EDM Friday June 5 brings new music from Alesso, Skrillex, Hardwell, Of The Trees, Tape B, and more.

New EDM Friday June 5 brings together new singles, album releases, remixes, and records made for clubs and festival sets, covering progressive house, bass music, trap, and crossover electronic music. From Alesso and OneRepublic with In Your Eyes to Skrillex with SOMA, Of The Trees and Tape B with Brackish, and Mersiv’s remix of Superheaven’s Youngest Daughter, these are the tracks you should not miss on this week’s New EDM Friday.

Alesso, OneRepublic – In Your Eyes

Alesso and OneRepublic return with In Your Eyes, their fourth collaboration and first new release together in over a decade. The single comes out on June 5, 2026, following their previous work on If I Lose Myself, Calling (Lose My Mind) with Sebastian Ingrosso, and Scars. Its release also comes as If I Lose Myself passes 500 million streams on Spotify, adding more context to the reunion between Alesso and Ryan Tedder. With its long gap between collaborations, connection to the golden era of dance music, and full vocal presence from OneRepublic, In Your Eyes gives this week’s New EDM Friday one of its biggest crossover releases.

Skrillex – SOMA

Skrillex releases SOMA, a 13-track album running 42 minutes with recent singles such as Thistle, Smoke, and Duro included in the tracklist. The album also features Tranki, Noche Without You, Chini, Anybody, and Diwali, continuing the run of new music he has been previewing through recent drops and social media updates. SOMA follows a busy release period for Skrillex, including Smoke with ISOxo, Cristale, and TeeZandos, plus Thistle with Randomer, Blawan, and MC Dricka. With a full 13-track project now out, SOMA is one of the biggest releases on this week’s New EDM Friday.

Van Snyder, Serena Bleu & Alexander Popov – You Get What You Give (B Jones Remix)

B Jones remixes You Get What You Give by Van Snyder, Serena Bleu, and Alexander Popov, giving the original a more direct club version for summer 2026. The remix keeps Serena Bleu’s vocal as the main focus while adding a bigger beat and a more forceful production style around it. Van Snyder and Alexander Popov remain tied to the original release, with B Jones bringing her version closer to the kind of sound DJs can work into club and festival sets. With its vocal hook and stronger club direction, You Get What You Give (B Jones Remix) adds a remix-led release to this week’s New EDM Friday.

GRiZ – Future Funk Volume 1 (Album)

GRiZ officially enters a bold new chapter with the drop of his long-awaited album, Future Funk Volume 1′, a sprawling, groove-driven body of work that captures the full spectrum of his current creative identity. Blending soulful funk, explosive bass music, psychedelic experimentation, and emotional release, the project arrives as the clearest distillation yet of what GRiZ has spent the last year building toward.

Melo Nada ft. k8 Smurf – Stop Me Now

Melo Nada makes his bitbird debut with Stop Me Now, a house and UK garage single featuring k8 Smurf. The track started from a simple idea, with Melo Nada saying he wanted to make something that would motivate him after buying a gym membership. It also follows the viral run of his debut single bambam, which reached #1 trending audio on Instagram globally and generated more than 1.5 million organic posts. With k8 Smurf carrying the hook and Melo Nada bringing his production background into a solo release, Stop Me Now adds a UKG and house entry to this week’s New EDM Friday.

Mesophonic & Tenney Way III – Ain’t Got Time

Mesophonic and Tenney Way III join forces and reunite for their latest collaboration, Ain’t Got Time. This track is built around the belief that setbacks and distractions aren’t worth slowing down for, the track serves as a statement of resilience from two artists determined to keep pushing forward no matter what stands in their way.

Of The Trees & Tape B – Brackish

Of The Trees and Tape B release Brackish, their first official collaboration, after more than a year of demand around the ID. Before its June 4, 2026 release, the track had been a regular part of both artists’ live sets and had already gained attention from fans online. The collaboration also follows their B2B set at Bonnaroo 2025, which added more interest around the pairing. With Of The Trees bringing his bass production style and Tape B adding his dubstep direction, Brackish gives this week’s New EDM Friday one of its main bass releases.

Superheaven – Youngest Daughter (Mersiv Remix)

Mersiv releases an official remix of Superheaven’s Youngest Daughter, taking the alternative favorite into bass music while keeping the vocal and emotional weight of the original intact. The remix comes from a personal place for Mersiv, who said Youngest Daughter is his favorite Superheaven song and that he started the remix during summer 2025 while writing music at the beach. The release also connects with his background before electronic music, where bands like Tool and Seether were part of his early influences. With Youngest Daughter already passing 128 million Spotify streams after its rediscovery online, Mersiv’s remix brings a major alternative song into this week’s New EDM Friday through an official bass rework.

Honorable mentions:

Above & Beyond – Feel The Vibe

AC Slater – Swingin’

Adam Ten – I Never Knew

Armin van Buuren – Let The Music Guide You (ReOrder pres. Crowd+Ctrl Remix)

Boris Brejcha – Alicante

Cloonee – I Rhyme Quick

Coone ft. Diss Reaction – Jiiieehaaaa

Disco Fries, Kayrae, Mintd – Elevate

Dubdogz, Zaark – Stolen Dance

Eli & Fur – Dreams At Dusk Part II (EP)

Flux Pavilion – U Want Me

HALIENE – Right Love

Hardwell – Remixes 2026 (EP)

Jan Blomqvist – More (Zerb Remix)

John O’Callaghan, Sue McLaren, Paul Skelton – Signs

Lost Frequencies – Live It All

Maddix – Acid For Breakfast

MEDUZA & RANI – Silence

Nicky Romero – Freak

Prospa – Free Your Mind (Album)

San Holo – TRUE LOVE IN A MADE UP WORLD (LP)

Sara Landry, Alt8 – Hands Up

Thomm, Blasterjaxx – ROM!G

Stream all the new music on Spotify and Audiomack to hear the full New EDM Friday playlist.

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Yohann Warren & Scarlett Deliver a Heartfelt Collaboration with “Think About”

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Scarlett and Yohann Warren release ‘Think About’, a melodic collaboration built on honest emotion and cinematic atmospheric production.

Scarlett and Yohann Warren come together for their new single “Think About” a track that feels as natural as it sounds. Built on honest emotion and subtle melodic energy, the release captures the kind of feeling that lingers long after the music fades.

Scarlett, who first gained recognition as a finalist on Swedish Idol 2013, brings a raw and expressive vocal performance shaped by real-life experiences and personal stories. “My main source of inspiration is definitely life and different life stories,” she shares. Her tone carries both warmth and vulnerability, giving the track an intimate edge that draws listeners in from the first note.

On the production side, Yohann Warren adds a cinematic and atmospheric touch, influenced by years of inspiration from festivals and defining moments in his journey. “There’s something special about standing in the middle of a crowd, feeling the music with thousands of people you don’t know,” he says. That energy translates clearly into the sound of “Think About.”

The collaboration itself came together organically. After connecting online, the two quickly found a creative chemistry that made the process feel effortless. The result is a track that sits somewhere between a late-night reflection and a shared moment on a dancefloor.

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Van Snyder & Alexander Popov Remake ‘You Get What You Give’ with Serena Bleu

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A composite press shot of the three artists behind You Get What You Give — Alexander Popov in a black t-shirt against a grey background, Van Snyder in a black cap and t-shirt against a light background, and Serena Bleu in a blue sheer top and dark sunglasses against an outdoor backdrop.

Van Snyder, Alexander Popov, and Serena Bleu reimagine the New Radicals classic ‘You Get What You Give’ as a high-energy electronic anthem built for festival dancefloors.

Some songs define an era. Others return to define the next one.

That’s the energy behind the electrifying new cover of You Get What You Give, reborn for the global dance floor by powerhouse producers Van Snyder and Alexander Popov, alongside the captivating voice of Serena Bleu.

Originally made famous by New Radicals, the 90s anthem carried a message of fearless optimism. Now it’s being reborn as a high-energy electronic powerhouse primed for festival stages, streaming charts, and viral dance floors.

Van Snyder showcases his signature blend of refined production,and soaring melodic intensity, while Alexander Popov injects the massive, euphoric energy that has made him a global trance icon and the driving force behind Interplay Records. Together, they’ve transformed the track into a soaring, hands-in-the-air anthem.

“Recording our version of You Get What You Give was a reminder of how powerful optimism can be. The song has always felt like a quiet act of rebellion against cynicism – joyful, fearless, and completely honest. Revisiting it was especially meaningful because it allowed us to tap back into that spirit, and hopefully pass along a bit of that same uplifting energy to a new generation of listeners.” said Van Snyder 

At the heart of it all is Serena Bleu, whose commanding vocal performance delivers the song’s timeless message with fresh fire – turning nostalgia into something thrillingly modern.

The result? Not just a cover, but a rebirth – one that has all the ingredients of the next viral dance hit. Big emotion. Bigger drops. And a message that still resonates: the music is in us, and it’s not going anywhere.

When this track lands, don’t be surprised if dance floors across the world erupt. The next anthem has arrived.

Stream this below and purchase here.

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