EDMTaste
The duo behind the UK Top 10 hit “Somedays” are back with a deeper, more emotional club anthem.
London-based house heavyweight Sonny Fodera and Dublin-born vocal powerhouse Jazzy are back together — and their latest track, “All This Time,” proves lightning really can strike twice. Released July 18 via Solotoko, the single finds the duo leaning into deeper, more soulful house territory, while keeping the euphoric hooks that first made them a perfect pairing.
Their first link-up, “Somedays,” became a UK Top 10 hit in 2024, earned a BRIT Award nomination, and became a festival favorite across Europe. Jazzy’s now-iconic vocal hook and Fodera’s shimmering production set the tone for what was to come.
“I never knew it was going to be this big… but it just keeps rising and rising,” Sonny Fodera told Official Charts at the time.
“It’s all about finding music that connects — and working with Jazzy is always effortless,” he added in a separate interview with Billboard.
Watch them perform “Somedays” live here 🎥 Watch on YouTube
“All This Time” slows things down to a mid-tempo groove, mixing UK garage-inflected percussion with Jazzy’s signature bittersweet vocal delivery. While “Somedays” was pure sunshine, this track brings more introspection — late-night, introspective, and built for the club’s closing moments.
🔊 Listen on SoundCloud
▶️ All This Time – Sonny Fodera & Jazzy (SoundCloud)
Fans are already calling it a future club classic. Early comments highlight the track’s “emotional edge” and “perfect balance between heartbreak and house energy.”
Sonny Fodera continues to dominate house music with headline slots at festivals like Creamfields and Tomorrowland, and a growing discography of crossover club hits. His “Mind Still” reached over 15M streams in 2024 alone.
Jazzy remains one of Ireland’s brightest exports, riding the momentum of “Giving Me” (No. 3 UK) as well as recent singles “High On Me,” “No Bad Vibes,” and “Closer To The Floor.” She is expanding her solo career with new collaborations across house, garage, and UK bass.
Together, they seem to capture the perfect storm of radio appeal and underground credibility.
If “Somedays” was the sun coming up, “All This Time” is what plays as you leave the club alone — a little wiser, a little sadder, but ready to dance again.
Both artists continue to evolve — and together, they seem unstoppable.
Written by: kdaz5
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