Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Entertainment

Review: Lost Frequencies and Zonderling soar on new track ‘Crazy’ (Includes first-hand account)

Felix De Laet, better known by his stage name Lost Frequencies has just launched his own record label, Found Frequencies, in partnership with Armada Music.

“Crazy” marks his inaugural release on his new imprint. The track is upbeat, fun and feel-good. It is bound to be a major smash on dance-floors worldwide. Dutch duo Zonderling lend their smooth vocals on the tune, which help make it pure bliss. “Crazy” has an optimistic, liberating and empowering message to it. The track garners 4.5 out of 5 stars.

This year, Lost Frequencies entered at No. 26 on DJ Magazine’s Top 100 DJs poll, which was the highest new entry for 2017. Most impressive about Lost Frequencies is that on Spotify alone, his singles and remixes have accumulated over one billion streams.

“Crazy” is available on iTunes.

To learn more about Lost Frequencies and his new track “Crazy,” check out his official website.

Markos Papadatos
Written By

Markos Papadatos is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for Music News. Papadatos is a Greek-American journalist and educator that has authored over 24,000 original articles over the past 19 years. He has interviewed some of the biggest names in music, entertainment, lifestyle, magic, and sports. He is an 18-time "Best of Long Island" winner, where for three consecutive years (2020, 2021, and 2022), he was honored as the "Best Long Island Personality" in Arts & Entertainment, an honor that has gone to Billy Joel six times.

You may also like:

Business

The world does not need another instantly disposable, inexcusably expensive, utterly useless monoculture.

Tech & Science

Agentic AI is scaling faster than trust, accountability, and consumer awareness. But is it safe?

World

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday that the US‑led global system of governance is enduring "a rupture."

Social Media

When AI systems start grounding answers in verified data and real records, unsubstantiated advice becomes a liability.