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Best Australian Music of the Week: March 9th-15th

Stay up to date with all the best Australian music from last week with Rolling Stone AU/NZ’s weekly roundup

DEVAURA

DEVAURA

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Stay up to date with Australian music releases with Rolling Stone AU/NZ’s weekly roundup.

Check out the best new music from Aussie acts released between March 9th-15th below!

Amy Shark – “The Biggest Dick”

Amy Shark’s new single “The Biggest Dick” – described to be the “ultimate break-up anthem” – is the first taste of her fourth studio album soft pop (due out July 31st). The song is about celebrating the little wins you have when feeling low, she says. “Things like coffees and blue skies. It’s the ultimate break-up song. A little bit sad, a little bit vulnerable, a little bit uplifting but mainly.. a big F U! You big dick.”

Salty – “Touch Grass”

Written and recorded in under six hours alongside collaborators Chelsea Warner and Cyrus Villanueva – the same team behind her previous single “Uh Huh!” – “Touch Grass” finds Salty leaning into glossy, high-energy pop while confronting a deeply modern dilemma: the addictive pull of social media and the quiet disconnection it can create.

Spacey Jane – “Do You Really Love Her?”

“Do You Really Love Her?” marks Spacey Jane’s first piece of new music since last year’s acclaimed album If That Makes Sense. Created during writing sessions for the album, the band said it “didn’t feel like the right fit” to include. last year, however, they “always wanted it to see the light of day”. Written on Mulholland Drive in the Hollywood Hills, the song leans into a bigger, more expansive sound, with punchy drums and lush and prominent synths that give it a wide screen feel.

DEVAURA – Vol. 2: If You Don’t Laugh, You’ll Cry

DEVAURA’s second EP, Vol. 2: If You Don’t Laugh, You’ll Cry, is a cinematic and unflinching exploration of what it means to be perceived. Across six genre-warped tracks, she explores the emotional labour of visibility, the longing to be seen, the fear of being misunderstood, and the exhaustion of adapting just to survive.

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