Sunlette’s “Siren” Is a Disco-Drenched Dream You’ll Want on Repeat
- ALT RECESS
- Apr 24
- 2 min read

Imagine this: you’re walking down a sunlit boulevard in 1978, glitter on your cheeks, heart full of rebellion, and a boombox on your shoulder — except the year is 2025 and your playlist just got blessed by “Siren” from LA’s own shimmering alt-pop trio, Sunlette.
Let’s just say it — “Siren” is the kind of track that makes you want to pull your roller skates out of retirement, toss on a fringe jacket, and dance like you’ve never been ghosted. It’s disco, it’s pop, it’s retro without being costume-y — the kind of groove that hits your bones before your brain catches up.
Born in the creative haze of a Hollywood recording studio, Sunlette is what happens when three incredibly different musicians — MAGH (on bass, bringing the funk), Emily at Best (vocals, with a voice dipped in honey and heartache), and Gorq (synths, basically a wizard) — stop making music for other people and start making it with each other. That magic? It shows.
“Siren” is a perfect storm of everything they do best. There’s a slinky bassline that flirts more than it walks, synth textures that shimmer like heat waves on a vinyl rooftop, and lyrics that toe the line between heartbreak and empowerment. It’s a love song, maybe. Or maybe it’s a warning. Either way, you’re going to dance to it.
The thing about Sunlette is that they don’t just sound good — they feel good. There’s warmth in what they create, like sunshine filtered through a kaleidoscope. They aren’t chasing trends. They’re chasing truth, wrapped in three-part harmony and a groove that won’t quit.
It’s not surprising they’ve already racked up over 200k streams and dropped five singles in their debut year alone — the momentum is real. And with their next track “Mother’s Daughter” (out May 9), featuring actual legend Nigel Olsson of Elton John Band fame, the retro-futuristic wave they’re riding is only getting bigger.
If “Siren” is your first taste of Sunlette, consider yourself lucky — you’ve got a whole universe to explore. Think Quincy Jones production sensibility meets Fiona Apple’s emotional edge, with Bee Gees sparkle thrown in for good measure. It’s thoughtful. It’s danceable. It’s uniquely them.
So yeah, maybe you’ve heard songs that sound like summer. But Sunlette? They sound like golden hour, like friendship, like falling in love with a stranger under a disco ball. “Siren” doesn’t just call you in — it sweeps you up and spins you around.
Stream it. Feel it. Add it to that playlist you save for windows-down, heart-wide-open drives.
You just found your new favorite band.
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