DAYA
With a new label and a powerful new track preceding her next project, the Grammy-winning “Don’t Let Me Down” singer is ready to launch the next phase of her career.
A few days before the release of her new song “Montana,” Daya is says that she’s “beyond excited” for the world to hear it, since the song represents a full-circle moment for the 22-year-old. Best known for pop hits like “Hide Away” and the Chainsmokers smash “Don’t Let Me Down,” Daya has used “Montana” a stripped-down acoustic song about wanting to escape the city for dirt roads and a sense of peace, which was released on Friday (Apr. 30) as a means of re-centering, ahead of her first project in five years arriving next month.
DAYA
With a new label and a powerful new track preceding her next project, the Grammy-winning “Don’t Let Me Down” singer is ready to launch the next phase of her career.
A few days before the release of her new song “Montana,” Daya says that she’s “beyond excited” for the world to hear it, since the song represents a full-circle moment for the 22-year-old. Best known for pop hits like “Hide Away” and the Chainsmokers smash “Don’t Let Me Down,” Daya has used “Montana” a stripped-down acoustic song about wanting to escape the city for dirt roads and a sense of peace, which was released on Friday (Apr. 30) as a means of re-centering, ahead of her first project in five years arriving next month.
The singer reflects on the lessons she's learned since winning a Grammy in 2017 and reaching success as a teen. "Things were going so fast when I was younger," Daya tells PEOPLE
Tady: Pittsburgh pop star Daya returns strong with Bad Girl
Pittsburgh s Grammy-winning pop singer Daya heats things up with Bad Girl, her new single set for impact Feb. 16 on Top-40 radio.
Co-produced by Charlie Puth, the song s instantly catchy chorus Bad girl, need a bad girl, because the bad boys just don t cut it sets the theme of Daya addressing her sexuality and identity as a bisexual woman. In a press release, the 22-year-old singer says the song also confronts the common implications of the term “bad girl.
“To me, the lyric of ‘Bad Girl’ can be used in an almost ironic way to play out the ‘problem child’ or archetypal rebel, flipping the script so that a ‘bad girl’ can be anyone who is confident and asserts themselves boldly in the world and doesn’t necessarily have to adhere to the stereotypical bad girl ‘look,’” Daya said.