Let Go, Let God
Xania Monet has built something quiet but solid here. This pop track sits at #33 with a 4.26 score, which honestly feels low given the execution. It's stripped-back pop that leans into vulnerability instead of trying to sound huge. The song walks that line between introspective and radio-ready without feeling forced.
The community rating is thin (just one person), which tells you how under-the-radar this one is. Let Go, Let God deserves more ears.
How Was I supposed to Know?
This is actually Monet's highest-charting track at #8 with a 4.45 score, but it still feels overlooked considering the catalog she's sitting on. How Was I supposed to Know? has that reflective pop sensibility that works best when you're in your own head. Listeners who found it rated it 2.0/5 on average, which is deceptively low — that small sample size probably includes some people who stumbled in expecting something different.
X Gon' Give It To Ya - 1950s Soul
Now this one is genuinely wild. 19s Soulers took a 2000s hip-hop anthem and wrapped it in 1950s soul. Think sparse instrumentation, warm vocals, and that deep blues-inflected groove that feels borrowed from another era. It shouldn't work. But at #37 with a 4.25 score, it's pulling this off.
The project's whole angle — reinterpreting modern tracks through vintage soul and Motown filters — is clever, but X Gon' Give It To Ya - 1950s Soul is the one that nails it. The genre shift isn't just a gimmick; it fundamentally changes what the song feels like. Only one person has rated it, which means the people discovering this artist are still just getting started.
These three are sitting in that awkward middle space where they chart well enough to stick around but not well enough to get real attention. Worth checking out if you're tired of what's trending. Head to /charts to dig deeper.



