There’s a moment in every great rock song where the band stops trying to impress you and just tells the truth. Don Broco hit that moment fast in “Euphoria,” a single that doesn’t pretend to be anything but a full-throttle shot of adrenaline, heart, and guts. Sure, it starts with a slick electronic shimmer, a little vocal sleight of hand to lull you in. But Don Broco aren’t here to whisper. They’re here to blow the roof off, and they waste no time doing it.
When the track erupts—heavy guitars grinding like steel on concrete, drums punching with the steadiness of a heartbeat that’s just shifted into sprint mode, bass slinking underneath like a reminder that groove matters as much as grit—you realize this band has figured out something essential: emotion lands hardest when it’s delivered without apology. Rob Damiani’s voice leads the charge, big and bold and earnest to the point of refusal. When he belts “Gonna live forever!” he’s not selling immortality. He’s selling that moment when music convinces you you’ve got more in the tank than you thought.
Broco say “Euphoria” is about chasing the magic of the first time—love, thrill, danger, discovery. And while that’s a theme as old as rock itself, they don’t treat it like nostalgia. They treat it like a challenge. They’re not reminiscing. They’re reaching. And the reach is what matters. That’s where the sweat is. That’s where the friction lives. That’s where great bands find out who they really are.
The most compelling thing about this track is how confidently it sits alongside the three singles that led up to it. “Cellophane” was all swaggering nu-metal bravado. “Hype Man” strutted like a prizefighter. “Disappear” dug deeper emotionally. “Euphoria” ties these threads together—dynamism with vulnerability, power with pulse. The band is writing like they’ve got a point to make, and playing like they’re not willing to waste a second making it.
What makes Don Broco dangerous right now—dangerous in the best way—is that they sound hungry again. Not hungry for charts or streams or playlists. Hungry for connection. Hungry for the stage. Hungry for the kind of moments rock was built for: sweaty, communal, unfiltered, alive.
“Euphoria” isn’t just another alt-rock single in a crowded field. It’s a reminder that rock still works when the people making it give a damn. Don Broco clearly do. And with their new era unfolding and Nightmare Tripping on the way, they’re not just asking listeners to tune in—they’re daring them to feel something.
That’s how you live forever in this business. One feeling at a time.



