There’s a rare kind of pop song that doesn’t just make you listen—it makes you feel every pulse, every tremor of desire. HOLLY’s FIX is exactly that. From the first synth flourish to the final breath of her vocals, the track captures the intoxicating, sometimes dangerous, chemistry of attraction. With a magnetic mix of urgency and control, HOLLY cements her status as an alt-pop artist to watch in 2026.
HOLLY’s artistry is the sum of a life in motion. Splitting time between New York, Sydney, and London, she’s spent more than a decade building her craft through writing, touring, and high-profile collaborations. From Synapson to Delta Heavy, and a globe-spanning tour with Chase & Status, she’s absorbed diverse sonic influences while refining a sound that is unmistakably her own. Now, her focus is clear: the world is ready to hear HOLLY, unfiltered.
FIX is a deep dive into the magnetic pull of desire. It’s not just about love or lust—it’s about a dependency that feels chemical, inevitable. Swirling synth textures meet minimalist, hypnotic beats, creating a backdrop that allows HOLLY’s vocals to dominate. The tension between restrained instrumentation and emotionally charged delivery mirrors the song’s narrative: the intoxicating push and pull of craving someone who has complete control over your emotional equilibrium.
What makes FIX stand out is HOLLY’s fearless lyricism. “It’s about that person who hits you harder than you expect,” she says. Lines like ‘You’re a fix… Got me falling to my knees’ are not just confessional—they’re cinematic, turning personal obsession into universal feeling. HOLLY’s ability to weave the seduction and danger of attraction into pop music demonstrates an artistry well beyond her years.
With FIX, HOLLY announces herself as more than a rising voice; she’s a master of mood and tension, a purveyor of the darkly glamorous side of pop. Confident, seductive, and emotionally charged, the track signals a defining moment in her trajectory. If alt-pop had a new queen of tension, HOLLY just claimed the crown—and she’s only getting started.