SINGLE REVIEW: $pr$tyx x Lil$tyx – Bad Dream
‘Bad Dream’ drifts through the spaces between night terrors and memory, a hazy fusion of post-punk guitars and raw, confessional emotion. The production feels deliberately claustrophobic — reverb pooling around each vocal line, guitars ringing like distant echoes in an empty room. It’s hypnotic in its pacing, unhurried but tense, like the slow replay of something you wish you could forget.
The interplay between $pr$tyx and Lil$tyx gives the track its pull: one side detached and reflective, the other more jagged and confrontational. Together they turn that contrast into something quietly gripping, where melody and mood feel inseparable. There’s a strange beauty in its roughness — every crack and distortion feeding into the unease it tries to capture.
‘Bad Dream’ lingers long after it ends. It’s not polished or safe, but that’s exactly what makes it work — an unfiltered snapshot of restlessness, regret, and the weight of everything that refuses to fade.