Don't Start Now (funk cover)
Scary Pockets
Scary Pockets' funk interpretation of Dua Lipa's "Don't Start Now" is perhaps their most natural fit — the original already pulses with disco-funk DNA, so the cover's task is less reinvention than revelation, stripping away the pop production polish to expose the groove skeleton underneath. The bass line becomes filthier and more prominent, the drums more organic and dynamic, the guitar work shifting from synthesized textures to live, percussive scratching. The arrangement removes the electronic sheen that made the original a global pop hit and replaces it with the sweaty immediacy of musicians in a room together, responding to each other's energy in real time. The vocal delivery can afford to be looser and more improvisational, riffing around the familiar melody with the confidence that the groove will catch any detour. What emerges is a version that sounds less like a produced single and more like the best song played at the best party you've ever attended. The lyrical content — post-breakup empowerment, moving on with style — gains new force when delivered over a live funk arrangement, transforming personal triumph into communal celebration. It's the platonic ideal of a cover: it makes you hear the original differently forever after.
fast
2020s
Sweaty, immediate, organic
United States
Funk, Disco. Live Funk Cover. Empowered, Celebratory. Strips away pop polish to reveal raw disco-funk skeleton, building from personal triumph to communal celebration. energy 8. fast. danceability 9. valence 8. vocals: Loose, improvisational, confident, riffing. production: Live funk band, percussive guitar scratching, organic drums, prominent bass. texture: Sweaty, immediate, organic. acousticness 3. era: 2020s. United States. The best house party you've ever attended where live musicians turn pop hits into funk revelations