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News: Charli XCX Swaps Brat Chaos For Guitars On New Single Rock Music

Charli XCX debuts new single Rock Music, marking a shift from pop to guitars. The track confirms her pivot to a louder sound.

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Editorial Team
May 8, 2026
2 min read
For the past year, pop culture has largely existed inside the fluorescent green afterglow of Brat. Now, Charli XCX appears ready to kick the whole thing through a wall of distorted guitars. New single "Rock Music" arrives after months of speculation that Charli was pivoting toward something louder and rougher, and the track wastes little time confirming the shift. Where Brat thrived on sleek club chaos and hyperpop abrasion, "Rock Music" leans into crunching riffs, leather-jacket swagger and a colder monochrome aesthetic. The accompanying video, directed by Aidan Zamiri, strips away the candy-coloured excess of the previous era and replaces it with something moodier and more confrontational. It doesn’t feel like nostalgia for indie sleaze or early-2000s alt-rock so much as Charli refracting those influences through her own hyper-stylised lens. That instinct for mutation has always been central to Charli XCX’s appeal. Few mainstream artists move between worlds as comfortably or unpredictably as she does, whether veering from underground club music into radio pop or collapsing both into the same song. "Rock Music" continues that refusal to sit still. Even with guitars pushed to the front, the track still carries the sharp edges and rhythmic instincts that have defined her recent work. The timing also reflects just how prolific Charli has become beyond music itself. Alongside work on a companion album for Wuthering Heights directed by Emerald Fennell, she’s steadily expanded into film acting, with appearances in projects including Faces of Death, I Want Your Sex and her own mockumentary The Moment. Increasingly, Charli feels less like a conventional pop star and more like a constantly evolving creative project moving across multiple mediums at once. Whether this new phase will generate the same kind of cultural saturation that Brat achieved is impossible to predict. Brat became bigger than an album cycle, mutating into an aesthetic, a meme ecosystem and an entire social vocabulary. "Rock Music" feels less interested in replicating that phenomenon than in detonating expectations before they harden into formula. For now, though, the shift itself is the interesting part. Charli XCX has built an entire career on moving before audiences fully catch up, and "Rock Music" suggests she’s already speeding toward another transformation entirely.

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Editorial Team

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