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April 30, 2026 Ollie Hunt Turns SPEEDY Into a Declaration of Pop Independence

Ollie Hunt does not want to walk forward; he wants to overtake in style. On ‘SPEEDY, the Melbourne artist activates a fantasy of self-upgrade with glossy video-clip energy, a 2000s R&B pulse and an attitude that asks for no permission. The track moves with the confidence of someone who has already left doubt, emotional baggage and anyone unable to keep up firmly in the rear-view mirror.

The production has a flawless surface: tight drums, polished melodies and a hook built to linger after the first listen. There is something of Justin Timberlake’s sleek hedonism, Pharrell Williams’ rhythmic precision and the victorious coolness that connects with Tate McRae’s current pop universe. But Ollie Hunt does not simply copy references; he filters them through his own sensitivity, one that feels more confessional, more image-conscious and more aware of the emotional weight sitting beneath an apparently effortless pop song.

‘SPEEDY’ works because it turns “moving on” into a mental choreography. There is no excessive drama, no victimhood, no need to explain the wound. There is speed, style and a nearly cinematic confidence. It is a song about no longer justifying your growth to people who could not grow with you. Instead of looking back in anger, Hunt accelerates.

The context matters too. After the organic impact of ‘Running Back’, the growing reach of his EP Prelude and the strong response to ‘Ah!’, Ollie Hunt is starting to look like much more than a local promise. His world connects pop, fashion, vulnerability and global ambition with unusual clarity for an emerging artist. ‘SPEEDY’ does not just add another single to his catalogue; it points toward a sharper direction.

Stream ‘SPEEDY‘:

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