I'm Good (Blue) (feat. Bebe Rexha)
David Guetta
The genius of this record is in how it weaponizes nostalgia without collapsing into irony. The bassline from Eiffel 65's late-1990s Eurodance landmark is lifted intact and recontextualized as the structural foundation of a contemporary festival anthem, and the cognitive double-take it produces is genuinely pleasurable — recognition and forward momentum arriving simultaneously. Guetta's production is clean and stadium-scaled: four-on-the-floor kicks, stacked synths building steadily upward toward a release that always delivers. Bebe Rexha's vocal is confident to the point of defiance — a declaration of emotional self-sufficiency delivered with a brightness that almost doesn't require belief because the rhythm will carry it regardless of whether anyone is convinced. The song doesn't ask to be analyzed; it asks to be surrendered to. It arrived during a period of widespread millennial nostalgia for late-1990s and early-2000s culture, giving it a double lifespan: new festival anthem and time machine simultaneously. You'd encounter it in a supermarket and feel inexplicably cheerful, or let it run at a house party when the night has reached its most unconditionally celebratory and no one needs a reason to keep going.
fast
2020s
bright, dense, polished
French EDM with nostalgic late-1990s Eurodance reference
EDM, Pop. Eurodance Revival. euphoric, defiant. A steady, confident declaration of self-sufficiency that escalates without pause into unconditional celebration.. energy 9. fast. danceability 9. valence 9. vocals: confident female, bright, defiant, chest-forward delivery. production: four-on-the-floor kicks, stacked synths, nostalgic Eurodance bassline, stadium-scale. texture: bright, dense, polished. acousticness 1. era: 2020s. French EDM with nostalgic late-1990s Eurodance reference. House party when the night has reached its most unconditionally celebratory peak and no one needs a reason to keep going.