Artist's albums
Downtown Baby
2023 · single
Two Steps Back
2023 · single
Fever Dream (Vlad Holiday Remix)
2022 · single
Write Me off the Show
2021 · EP
Destruction
2021 · single
Skinny Dipping
2021 · single
Young and Stupid
2021 · single
I'll Probably Never Be Somebody
2020 · single
Rain
2020 · single
Fall Apart with Me
2020 · EP
Phonograph
2020 · single
Lazy
2020 · single
Live at Berlin, New York City
2020 · album
It Was Always There
2019 · single
So Damn Into You
2019 · single
Bad Influence
2019 · single
Artificial Paradise
2018 · single
Like in the Movies
2018 · single
Obscurity
2018 · single
Tunnel Vision
2018 · single
Children
2018 · single
Quit Playing Cool
2017 · single
Similar artists
Fog Lake
Artist
CASTLEBEAT
Artist
Dream, Ivory
Artist
Flower Face
Artist
Johnny Goth
Artist
TENDER
Artist
Roland Faunte
Artist
Jesse Jo Stark
Artist
Milmine
Artist
Alexandra Savior
Artist
Acid Ghost
Artist
Jesse®
Artist
Banes World
Artist
Tyler Burkhart
Artist
The Technicolors
Artist
Tempesst
Artist
Low Hum
Artist
Ruby Haunt
Artist
Cemeteries
Artist
Biography
Holiday has been known to write about romanticizing the past, the human condition, and looking at love and relationships through realistically dark tinted lenses. He’s been open about living with a debilitating depression, which is likely why the happier moments in his songs are still tinged with melancholy. As if knowing those moments are soon to be fleeting, while trying desperately to hold on and find a way to truly enjoy them. Having gained nearly 40 million streams as a completely independent artist, it seems as if he’s resonating with a subculture of people that are also trying to do the same. His love of music from the 1920’s to the 60’s is exceedingly present in his latest, “Downtown Baby,” which is the first single from his upcoming debut full-length album. The song describes Holiday’s psychedelic venture to his drug dealer in New York City’s Lower East Side. It’s dripping with spring reverb from the chugging Les Pauls to the Phil Spector-esque percussion, tinged with a bass line and string arrangement reminiscent of Serge Gainsbourg from a 1960’s Paris, and glued together by his captivatingly crooning vocals that always seem to be pulled from another era. Almost a nod to an older jazz singer, an equally gloomy New Yorker that beared the same last name. His new LP will tackle a lot of similar escapism, along with the gamut of gargantuan emotions from battling to learning how to live with depression. The yet to be titled album is tentatively out this summer.