X Gon' Give It To Ya - 1950s Soul
19s Soulers took a modern hip-hop track and completely reimagined it as vintage soul and blues. The result actually works. This isn't a gimmick — it's a genuine arrangement that strips down the original to its bones and rebuilds it with warm, analog-sounding instrumentation. The horns hit different when they're arranged like they're from a 1950s juke joint.
The community has noticed. Listeners rated this 4.17 out of 5 across eight weeks on the charts. What's wild is that all five of 19s Soulers' releases are currently charting. They've found something that resonates: taking songs people know and setting them in a completely different era. It's a concept that should be getting more attention than it is.
Jag vet, du är inte min
This one's Swedish. Jacub is working in pop territory with a song that sounds like it's built on genuine emotion rather than formula. The melody sits comfortably but doesn't overstay its welcome. It's the kind of track that doesn't announce itself loudly — it just settles in.
The interesting part: listeners who actually engaged with this rated it 3.6 out of 5, which isn't stellar, but it's holding position #38 after seven weeks. That suggests people are discovering it and sticking with it, even if reactions are mixed. With eight of nine tracks charting, Jacub's clearly built something consistent. Worth a listen if you want to hear what AI pop sounds like when it's not trying to sound American.
A Little Thing Like Love
Kayla Kross nailed this one. It's a straightforward pop track that actually has hooks worth remembering. The production feels clean without being sterile. There's something almost indie-pop about how it's arranged — not overproduced, just confident.
The numbers back it up. Listeners rated this 4.0 out of 5, which is solid for a track charting at #41. All five of Kross's releases are active on the charts right now, but this one stands out as her strongest. If you're looking for AI-generated pop that doesn't sound hollow or algorithmically generic, this deserves a spot in your rotation.
These three prove that good songs exist outside the top ten. Head over to /charts to dig deeper.



