If you’ve ever wanted to blast your feelings at full volume while racing through city lights, Dan Devlin’s ‘SCREAM’ might just be your new go-to soundtrack. This isn’t your typical breakup record, it’s a turbo-charged emotional purge set to strobe-lit synths and pop hooks sharp enough to draw blood.
Across the EP’s three tracks, Devlin doesn’t waste time wallowing. He takes heartache, ego crashes, and late-night overthinking and turns them into something defiantly alive. Every beat pulses like a heartbeat that refuses to slow down, every chorus hits like a text you shouldn’t have read but can’t stop looking at. It’s catharsis on the dancefloor, where you feel everything and let it go at the same time.
What’s impressive here is how DIY it all feels without ever sounding small. Devlin, working mostly from his London flat, crafts musical spaces that feel big enough to hold all your worst nights and still leave room to move. There’s a pulsing, dark-glam energy to these tracks: think club-ready pop that isn’t afraid to show its teeth. It’s sweaty, glittered, a little bitter, and totally addictive.

“This project makes me want to SCREAM out the top of a sunroof after leaving an ex on read,” Devlin says, and honestly, that nails it. This is music for the aftermath: when you’ve cried, deleted the photos, and decided to wear something that makes you feel invincible anyway.
Whether you’re driving solo at midnight or dancing with strangers under coloured lights, ‘SCREAM’ offers the rarest kind of pop, vulnerable but full of swagger. Devlin’s voice carries every lyric like a secret you didn’t mean to tell but needed to say out loud.
With ‘SCREAM’, Dan Devlin gives us the emotional release we didn’t know we were craving; a reason to feel everything, shout it out, and still keep dancing.