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On September 12, 2025, Demi Lovato dropped Here All Night, the second single off their upcoming ninth studio album It’s Not That Deep, marking a confident, fiery step back into dance-pop.
Sound & Lyrics
Produced by Zhone, the track pulses with electronic beats and upbeat energy. It’s a breakup song — but one written from the perspective of a character, not Demi’s own story. That distinction gives it a kind of theatrical release, letting the emotions explore without the weight of personal confessions. The lyrics tumble with movement: “Sweatin’ on the dance floor under the lights,” “Begging for the bass ’til it’s hitting me right” — it’s heartbreak, but paired with dance and late nights, a bittersweet euphoria.
The Video
Directed by Hannah Lux Davis, the music video embraces vulnerability wrapped in motion. Lovato dances through an apartment, alone, turning what could be isolation into empowerment — using choreography and physical presence to process pain. The visuals are personal rather than spectacle-driven, letting the emotion land more quietly yet powerfully. It mirrors the idea of staying out all night, not just as party, but as a way of staying with what hurts until you've danced it through.
Why It Matters
This isn’t just another single — Here All Night signals a shift. After the rock inflections of recent projects like Holy Fvck and Revamped, Demi seems to be reclaiming a more dance-pop, club-ready sound. And often, these shifts are hard — but when they work, they define eras. With lyrics that feel cinematic, a video that balances emotional depth and performance, and a sound built for both the speakers and the dancefloor, this single could mark a new chapter.
Takeaway
Here All Night is not Demi Lovato running from heartbreak, but staying with it — under neon lights, with a beat. It’s catharsis, lust, loss, and joy all wrapped in one. If this is where Demi’s new era begins, it’s already off to a blazing start.
You can grab your copy of the track over on Amazon and iTunes.
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