Maya felt a pull. She stepped into the crowd, letting the heavy four-on-the-floor beat dictate her movements. The remix took the desperation of the lyrics and turned it into pure, unadulterated energy. It was the sound of driving too fast with the windows down, the sound of laughing through tears, the sound of reclaiming your own skin.
The familiar, gravelly warmth of Dermot Kennedy’s voice cut through the ambient noise, grounded and raw. “Kiss me like the world is gonna end.” Dermot Kennedy - Kiss Me (Paul Woolford Remix)
As the build-up intensified, Maya closed her eyes. Dermot’s voice soared higher, chopped and looped by Woolford’s production, spiraling up toward a peak. The tension in the room was electric. Then, the drop. Maya felt a pull
The piano chords exploded back into the mix, bright and triumphant. Maya threw her hands up, letting the rhythm wash over her. In that moment of pure audio euphoria, she wasn't thinking about yesterday or worrying about tomorrow. She was just a heartbeat in a sea of lights. It was the sound of driving too fast
But before the emotion could pull her into a slow, melancholic sway, Paul Woolford’s house production slammed into the track. The heavy, driving bassline kicked in, and a soaring, euphoric piano chord shattered the tension. It wasn't a sad song anymore; it was a battle cry for the living. It was an invitation to feel everything, all at once, at 126 beats per minute.
She stood at the edge of the packed dance floor, nursing a drink she hadn't touched. Then, the DJ dropped it.