SweetNSour Magazine

Discover R3HAB New Single "All My Life" Available Now

Discover R3HAB’s New Single “All My Life” Available Now

R3HAB ’s new single “All My Life” may be built for the dance floor, but it hits somewhere much deeper. Released via Polydor Records/Universal, the track opens with unexpected softness: a single piano line, almost too delicate for a room full of bass-hungry fans, paired with a breathy vocal that feels like it’s exhaled rather than sung. But that’s the point.

For an artist who’s built a legacy on massive collaborations, chart-topping anthems, and sold-out world tours, “All My Life” is surprisingly vulnerable. R3HAB, the moniker of Dutch-Moroccan producer Fadil El Ghoul, has never sounded more dialed into emotion. The lyric “Parachute when I free fall,” written during a songwriting camp in Thailand, cuts straight to the feeling of surrender—of trusting the fall, not fearing it.

Discover R3HAB New Single "All My Life" Available Now

There’s a lightness in the production that sets it apart. The usual R3HAB trademarks are there—polished synths, rhythmic finesse, a sense of wide-open space—but they’re harnessed in service of something more personal. Instead of reaching for the typical euphoric build-and-drop formula, he lets the melody breathe. The drop hits, but it lands like a soft wave rather than a thunderclap. It’s house music that doesn’t demand your attention—it invites it.

“All My Life” feels tailor-made for a summer that’s more about introspection than excess. It could soundtrack a festival sunset or a solo night drive. That duality is what makes it resonate: it’s big, but not bombastic. It’s catchy, but not disposable. Most of all, it’s honest.

R3HAB has little left to prove. With over 12 billion streams, a catalog that includes work with everyone from ZAYN and Ava Max to Luis Fonsi and Calvin Harris, and festival appearances that span the globe, his name already sits comfortably among the elite. Yet here, on “All My Life,” he sounds like an artist still searching—not for approval, but for connection.

And maybe that’s what makes this track hit harder than anything else he’s released in years. It’s a love letter to letting go. A quiet anthem for people who crave movement not just in their bodies, but in their minds. A reminder that sometimes the biggest risks lead to the safest landings.