Demi Lovato’s “It’s Not That Deep”
- Jade McLeod

- Oct 25, 2025
- 2 min read
Updated: Dec 24, 2025
It’s Not That Deep finds Demi Lovato leaning into euphoria. The album keeps things tight and immediate, trading heaviness for motion while putting her voice front and center. Think late-night synths, clean drops, and choruses that arrive fast and stick even faster. The record favors glossy electronic textures, big bass, and crisp toplines. Instead of digging into long, confessional arcs, Demi goes for presence and release. The sequencing is deliberate, moving like a DJ set that rises, breathes, and glows again.
Fast
Pop at full tilt. Upbeat and EDM-leaning with a dubstep flirt, it snaps the album into motion. Side-chain swells and a buzzy mid-bass give the chorus its lift while Demi keeps the delivery punchy and precise.
Here All Night
Upbeat and fast, the kind of chorus that lands on first listen. It feels like classic Demi with more low-end muscle. Four-on-the-floor drums and wide pads make it an easy add to weekend playlists. It is so Demi in the way the hook opens up and invites a shout-back.
Frequency
Electronic and huge. A power-song posture with late-2000s Euro-club sparkle, a little Cascada in the DNA, and that bass that keeps everything locked in place. Hands-in-the-air territory without losing clarity in the vocal.
Let You Go
Slower compared to the rush around it but still electronic pop. Verses sit close to the mic, the chorus blooms, and the lyric reads like exhale and release. Smart pacing gives the record its first breath.
Sorry To Myself
Electronic pop built around a vocal moment. Reflective and hopeful, especially if you know Demi’s story. It sits at the intersection of self-forgiveness and resilience, a reminder of the strength a life in the spotlight demands and how vital self-love becomes when the noise peaks.
Little Bit
A nostalgic electronic shimmer runs through this one. The vocals glide across synths that nod to late-2000s radio without feeling dated. Expect a middle-eight that strips down to let the melody shine.
Say It
Slower, with a clear vocal focus. The build is patient and the beat drop is the payoff, rubbery and satisfying. It is the kind of track a DJ can slip into a set and keep Demi’s presence undeniable.
In My Head
Fun and modern. Upbeat drums, playful ad-libs, and a springy chorus. The vocals are sharp and agile, proving you can keep the energy high without crowding the mix.
Kiss
Charli XCX's energy in a glossy, accessible frame. Modern electric pop with flirty edges and, again, excellent vocals. Candy-coated synths and talk-sing cadences make it perfect for getting-ready playlists.
Before I Knew You
Slower and a vocal moment. It carries the polished glow of sleek mid-tempo radio and will remind some listeners of the mood of certain 1989 vault tracks. Guitars whisper under the synths while the melody lifts on open vowels.
Ghost
Slower and more somber. The vocals are so strong here, sitting in a roomy mix of keys and soft percussion. It feels like the curtain call, a gentle fade that leaves the emotion lingering.





Comments