Some debut singles feel like introductions. Others feel like inevitabilities. “Sweet Dejavu” the debut release from Emma Bass, lands firmly in the latter – a track that signals the arrival of an artist who’s been quietly shaping her craft long before the spotlight caught up. Arriving January 16th, 2026, it marks a defining moment for a performer ready to step fully into her own.
That sense of inevitability makes more sense when you trace Emma’s path back to the beginning. Born in Weston-super-Mare, Bristol, she moved to Australia at just three years old, growing up between Liverpool, the Central Coast, and Sydney. By the time she returned to Sydney at 18, her direction felt instinctive rather than calculated – music wasn’t a pivot, but a continuation of a life spent performing.
Performance has always been Emma’s first language. A singer, actor, and dancer from a young age, the stage was never something she stepped onto cautiously – it was where she belonged. That foundation evolved naturally into DJ culture, where she began touring Australia and incorporating her vocals into club sets. Not as a gimmick, not as an afterthought, but as a defining part of how she connects with a crowd.

The result is a sound that sits confidently between worlds. Blending underground energy with refined artistry, Emma’s sets weave together UKG, tech house, and bass-driven club music, delivered with a vocal presence that cuts through the room. It’s a balance of groove and emotion that feels intentional without ever sounding overworked – the kind of confidence that only comes from time spent learning the craft properly.
On the inspiration behind the track, Bass shares; “Sweet Déjà Vu captures the magnetic tension between desire and distance… that fleeting moment where passion burns bright, even knowing it won’t last. It’s something I think most of us can align with, having a fleeting passionate feeling that constantly comes back into your life and you give in but know it’s only going to last that one night as you aren’t good for each other.”
That same honesty has shaped the steady rise that led her here. Emma’s breakout collaboration “Why Don’t You” with Nemo (AUS), released on Be Rich Records, stormed the ARIA Club Charts and caught the attention of Steve Aoki, earning airplay across the U.S. and Canada – launching Emma’s first Australian tour and firmly placing her on the radar as one to watch. It was a turning point that proved her appeal extended far beyond a single scene or city.
Now, Sweet Dejavu arrives not as a reaction to that momentum, but as a natural progression of it. The debut feels self-assured, shaped by years of performing, collaborating, and immersing herself in club culture – a release that trusts the listener to lean in rather than spelling everything out.

As the release approaches, Emma remains firmly grounded in the spaces that shaped her sound, closing out the year and stepping into 2026 with a run of standout shows across Sydney and beyond, alongside potential UK shows and a tour in 2026. It’s a reminder that for all the attention building around her name, her connection to the dancefloor remains central.
“I’m super excited about this! A lot of people know me as a DJ, and didn’t know I am a singer as well so this is something I’m super proud to put out and hopefully perform this live in the coming future.”
Currently based in Sydney, Emma Bass represents a new wave of Australian artists – globally minded, deeply connected to club culture, and unafraid to blur the lines between DJ, vocalist, and performer. Sweet Dejavu doesn’t announce her arrival so much as confirm it. Emma Bass has been moving toward this moment for years – and Sweet Dejavu makes it clear she’s exactly where she’s meant to be, poised to make a lasting mark on the global electronic scene.
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