There’s a difference between artists who release songs and artists who build worlds, and VELRAVEN clearly wants to be the second kind. The London-based pop-rock artist has spent her early releases sketching out something bigger than a catalog. Each track lands like a chapter, and the project as a whole reads more like a story she’s slowly revealing than a collection of singles.
Her sound sits somewhere between dark pop and alternative rock. Cinematic production, sharp hooks, vocals that swing between fragile and ferocious. She writes from personal experience, and the recurring themes are obsession, control and the kind of emotional intensity that doesn’t make for comfortable listening but does make for honest songwriting. The result feels both intimate and theatrical, which is a hard balance to pull off without tipping into melodrama.
You can hear that range across her two recent tracks, Your Love’s a Drug and Out For Blood. The first one digs into the seductive pull of wanting someone you know is bad for you. Out For Blood picks up after the betrayal, when hurt hardens into something more like armor. Played back to back, they work as two sides of the same emotional arc, moving from temptation toward reinvention.
The people she’s working with say something about her ambitions too. Your Love’s a Drug was mixed by Mark Needham, whose résumé includes The Killers, Imagine Dragons, Fleetwood Mac and P!NK. Her releases have been mastered by 12x Grammy-winning engineer Brian Lucey, one of the more prominent names in the field, with credits spanning Depeche Mode, The Black Keys, Arctic Monkeys, Liam Gallagher, Royal Blood, Marilyn Manson and “The Greatest Showman.” Lucey is known for caring less about technical specs than about how a record actually hits you, and that instinct fits VELRAVEN’s music, where the whole point is the emotional jolt landing before you’ve had time to think about it. That’s serious company for an artist still early in her run.
The credits matter, but they’re not the most interesting thing about her. What stands out is how seriously she takes the world-building. She pulls from cinema, mythology and fashion, and she treats music as a door into something larger rather than the whole house. Symbols repeat. Storylines shift. The meaning of a song changes depending on when and how you listen to it. She’s not handing listeners easy answers, which is a risk, but it’s also what keeps people coming back to fill in the gaps themselves.

Your Love’s a Drug, released in April 2026, is the clearest example of what she’s going for. It lives in that uneasy space where obsession dresses itself up as devotion, where leaving and returning become the same motion. “Every time I let you go / I let you in again,” she sings, and the whole track circles that contradiction without trying to resolve it. The hook leans on a drug metaphor that could feel tired in lesser hands, but the writing stays specific enough to land. There’s an open grave, a locked door with the keys left in it, a promise not to overdose this time that you don’t quite believe.

The song also comes with an official music video that’s genuinely well put together, the kind of visual that extends the story rather than just illustrating it.
Right now VELRAVEN is still in the building phase, dropping pieces of a picture that’s coming into focus with each release. The universe she’s constructing has a clear logic to it, and watching it expand is part of the appeal. The most telling thing about her is what she’s clearly not doing. She isn’t trying to slot into a world that already exists. She’s drawing the map for her own.
You can follow VELRAVEN on Instagram and TikTok, and find her music here.





























