Welcome to Original Synths, our neon-lit corner of the internet dedicated to the pulsing heart of modern Synthwave. This is where analog dreams, retro beats, and futuristic vibes collide.
Witness the sound of a mirrorball shattering! French house doesn’t just walk into a room—it struts in under a mirrorball, drenched in filtered disco loops and unapologetic grooves ...
LukHash’s Home Arcade feels like someone cracked open a time capsule from 1989, wired it into a modern DAW, and said, “Yeah, let’s make this thing glow.” It’s pure neon energy—bright, buzzy, and unapologetically retro in that way Gen‑Xers don’t have t...
If you’re craving something that feels like driving through neon-lit streets at midnight, Heat by Morgan Willis is ready to hand you the keys. Known for his polished ....
He is just a kid stretched out in the backyard grass, headphones swallowing his ears, watching clouds drift like slow‑motion daydreams across a washed‑out summer sky. One song—”Champagne Wishes” mysterious, shimmering, bigger than anything he had ..
Imagine: you linger in the mall long past closing, drifting under half-dimmed fluorescent lights while the smells of popcorn salt and pretzel butter hang in the air. Most of the stores are gated, the escalators still, the arcade sign flickering at the end of the corridor—but in ...
Listening to Cosmopolis feels like flipping through a half-remembered VHS tape of the 1980s—warped, glowing, and emotionally heavier than it first appears. Miami Nights 1984 leans hard into synthwave nostalgia, but this album isn’t just about retro aesthetics ...
If you grew up recording songs off the radio with your finger hovering nervously over the “stop” button, The Midnight feels less like a band and more like a time-travel accident you’re happy to ignore. The duo — Tyler Lyle on vocals and Tim McEwan on production — formed back ...
LukHash’s Home Arcade feels like someone cracked open a time capsule from 1989, wired it into a modern DAW, and said, “Yeah, let’s make this thing glow.” It’s pure neon energy—bright, buzzy, and unapologetically retro in that way Gen‑Xers don’t have t...