A bass-led soul release on Unity Records, Adi Oasis teams with CARRTOONS for a chorus-first single built on four-on-the-floor drums, wah guitar color, sitar sparkle, and bright harmonies—steady, warm, and road-ready.
Why it hits
The track opens a lane and Adi Oasis threads it—quietly firm delivery, feathered edges, syllables locked to the grid with calm precision. The stance stays forward and unflustered, lifted by a round chorus and a grounded rhythm section.
What it sounds like
A supple electric-bass figure lays the floor while a tight kit rides four-on-the-floor. After four bars, wah guitar blinks a warm chord; a sitar-tinted phrase flickers at the edge and hints at lift. Sustained Rhodes chords anchor the middle and buoys the tempo, keeping space open. Adi opens on the chorus, stacks harmonies, and lets the low end set the stride. All the while, guitars drift from bubbles to easy strums. Midway through, the “no pain, no gain” refrain opens the frame with extra vocals and a small bump in drive that nudges the pulse ahead. The mix stays ordered and clean, lanes defined, and the lead rides with daylight on it.
The cut-through
Quick context on the bathrobe show that feeds this record’s attitude. En route to a gig, the airline misplaced her bag, so Adi Oasis stepped onstage in the hotel robe and played the set anyway. She later shared the moment publicly, and the clip ran up millions. That shrug at chaos turns up inside “Silver Lining” as a stance—say what needs saying, keep moving, and let outcomes land where they land. The lines “Let the chips fall where they may” and “sometimes it’s worth it to just say f**k it” play like replay-ready self-talk. And the rhythm section underlines each point with patient push. A first link-up with CARRTOONS that feels like a groove-head handshake—bass forward, drums planted, colors spare—cool and exact, with a quietly funny origin story about walking toward the bright side.
Credits
Producer(s): Adi Oasis, CARRTOONS • Label(s): Unity Records • Release: 09/2025 • Album: N/A
