Dusky returns with Keep On, and it lands like a fresh peak-time secret instead of a catalog cut. The groove feels immediate, the hook is lean, and the whole thing sounds built for people who need the floor to answer back.
Low-end pressure rolls under crisp percussion, while the synths arrive with a cold, glassy shine. Every hit feels placed with a carpenter’s patience, so the track keeps moving without ever getting crowded.
On a dark commute, a late workout, or the last ten minutes before the party turns, it gives the room a little more nerve. Few tracks feel this current without trying too hard.