Updated regularly as new Neon Music Signals emerge. Last updated February 2026.
Some songs arrive already loud. Others move quietly at first, building momentum in smaller rooms before the algorithm notices.
The Neon Music: Early Signals playlist exists for the second type. It connects tracks we’ve already covered on Neon Music, including Julia Campbell’s Almost Did, into one listening narrative, revealing the patterns that emerge when emerging artists begin circling similar emotional territory.
What is the Neon Music: Early Signals playlist?
Neon Music: Early Signals is a curated Spotify playlist tracking emerging artists and songs covered on neonmusic.co.uk before they reach wider editorial rotation. Instead of chasing trends, it maps how restraint, vulnerability and sonic minimalism are shaping a new wave of independent releases.
Neon Music: Early Signals — Featured Tracks
- Julia Campbell – Almost Did
- Cat Clyde – Another Time
- Dirty Blond – Wants to Cry Until There’s Nothing Left
- Ellur – Dream of Mine
- Raynor – Brighter Than Before
- Bellah & DESTIN CONRAD – Typical
- sombr – Homewrecker
- Dua Saleh & Bon Iver – Flood / Glow
- Joji & GIVĒON – Piece of You
- Gbnga – 2026
- MEEK – Fabulous
- Pem – (easily) moved
- Nina Nesbitt – Seventeen
How These Songs Connect
Julia Campbell’s Almost Did sits near the emotional centre of the playlist, continuing the restrained tension we explored in our full review. Her hushed vocal delivery refuses melodrama even as the arrangement swells beneath it, making the song feel unfinished in a deliberate way.
Cat Clyde’s Another Time shifts the mood toward reflection. When we wrote about the track, the real story was stillness — a wanderer pausing long enough to confront memory rather than outrun it. Here, the blues guitar feels less like nostalgia and more like grounding.
Dirty Blond’s Wants to Cry Until There’s Nothing Left keeps the atmosphere suspended. The space around the vocal becomes part of the emotion itself, echoing the emotional exhaustion threaded through the original review.
Ellur’s Dream of Mine and Raynor’s Brighter Than Before extend that reflective thread, nudging the playlist from confession toward quiet resilience.
Bellah and DESTIN CONRAD’s Typical changes the temperature without breaking the mood. The verses hold back before the chorus opens emotionally, creating a push-and-pull dynamic that feels sharper when placed alongside more introspective tracks.
sombr’s Homewrecker brings a colder edge. Rather than exploding, the track tightens around minimal drum patterns and a voice that feels deliberately distant, reinforcing the persona shift discussed in the Neon Music review.
Dua Saleh’s Flood and Glow with Bon Iver deepen the atmosphere. Voices merge into textured layers that feel less like a feature and more like shared emotional space, bridging indie and electronic elements without disrupting the playlist’s restraint.
We track early momentum in music every week. Neon Signals is where it shows up first.
Joji’s presence arrives through Piece of You, drawn from the fragmented emotional world of Piss in the Wind. The duet plays like a conversation that never resolves, mirroring the album’s unfinished emotional sketches.
Gbnga’s 2026 injects urgency without abandoning introspection. The track carries the restless energy of an artist questioning success rather than celebrating it, shifting the playlist toward movement.
MEEK’s Fabulous follows with rhythm-driven confidence that feels more like identity performance than celebration, while Pem’s (easily) moved softens the momentum again, settling into a late-night atmosphere that drifts rather than declares.
Nina Nesbitt’s Seventeen lands near the emotional peak, revisiting youth through adulthood rather than romanticising it. The track reframes nostalgia as something complicated — a memory that doesn’t sit comfortably.
Signal Notes — What This Playlist Reveals
Across these tracks, a pattern emerges. Many artists lean toward restraint rather than spectacle, allowing quiet vocals, sparse arrangements and unresolved emotion to carry the weight. Control replaces chaos. Memory replaces nostalgia. Even the more rhythmic tracks avoid full release, choosing tension over triumph.
This feels less like a finished movement and more like artists negotiating identity in real time.
These songs don’t sound like a final destination. They sound like artists testing who they are before the spotlight catches up.
▶️ Listen to Neon Music: Early Signals

