The New York Songwriter’s 2024 Single Still Earns Fresh Discovery in Indie Pop
Plenty of singles make their run and slip out of the rotation within a season. fadin, the melodic Alt Rock Pop track Lucky Duck released in October 2024, has done the opposite. It still turns up in fresh playlists and features well over a year on. Built on spoken-sung vocals and a moody low end, the New York songwriter’s breakup song keeps pulling in new listeners.
You can listen to our full playlist which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


The Alt Rock Pop Sound of Lucky Duck’s fadin
fadin sits where Alt Rock Pop, Alternative Pop, and the melodic side of indie pop rock meet. Its roots reach back into country and classic rock too. The track leads with a hook you can hum after one play. Then it leaves room around the spoken-sung vocal and a moody bassline, so nothing crowds the melody. That balance, immediate up top and durable underneath, keeps the song from feeling like a single-week release.
There is craft in the restraint. Rather than stacking layers to sound bigger, the mix keeps the melody and the voice up front. That is a large part of why the hook sticks. Lucky Duck wrote fadin during the slow end of a relationship both people could see coming, and that lived-in honesty carries through the arrangement.
Lucky Duck has named boygenius and Clairo among the touchpoints for the writing. You can hear it in the unforced melodic pull and the willingness to let a quiet moment sit. fadin reaches for that register on its own smaller, homespun scale. It feels familiar on first listen without leaning on anyone else’s sound.

Why fadin Keeps Finding Listeners a Year On
Most catalogue tracks quiet down once their release week is over. fadin has done the reverse. It keeps gathering fresh attention as new listeners work back through Lucky Duck’s discography. In a streaming era, a strong song can surface long after its release date. This single is a clear case of a track earning a second and third life on merit.
That pattern says something about how people find music now. Playlists, back-catalogue browsing, and word of mouth mean a strong indie single is no longer tied to its launch window. fadin has taken full advantage of that shift. For an independent artist working out of New York, a song that keeps surfacing is worth more than a loud opening week that quickly fades.
The staying power is deliberate. “The continued interest in ‘fadin’ is incredibly rewarding,” said Jasper Low, founder of Lucky Duck. “We crafted this track to be timeless, and seeing it still connect with new listeners, years after its initial release, truly validates our artistic vision. It’s a testament to the power of melodic indie rock and pop that it continues to find its audience.”


How the Press Received Lucky Duck’s fadin
fadin has already gathered a run of independent coverage. Existential Magazine featured it in their October 2024 roundup. They described Lucky Duck as a country, pop, and rock blender out of New York City, and called the single a personal turn through the complexities of a relationship. Lucky Duck also sat for longer conversations with Sinusoidal Music and The Other Side Reviews. Both dug into the writing behind the track and the wider catalogue.
That range of coverage is a fair measure of why the song keeps circulating. Features that run from a quick playlist nod to a long-form conversation tend to follow songs with more than a passing hook. fadin has drawn both.
Who fadin Is For
The single fits anyone who keeps a playlist of melodic Alt Rock Pop within reach. These are listeners who track independent artists as closely as chart names. It rewards repeat plays and sits comfortably beside the brighter, hook-led corners of alternative and indie pop. If your rotation leans on guitar-forward songwriting with a clear top line, fadin slots in without friction.
QueerPeople.News has always made room for independent voices working outside the major-label system. Lucky Duck’s steady, self-directed way of releasing and re-surfacing music fits that remit. For a New York artist building an audience one honest song at a time, a catalogue track that keeps finding listeners is exactly the sort of story worth sharing.
QueerPeople.News curator team: “What keeps us coming back to ‘fadin’ is how little it strains for attention. The hook does the work, the vocal stays close and conversational, and a year on it still lands like a song made to outlast its release week.”
Where to Hear Lucky Duck
fadin is out now. Stream it on Spotify, find Lucky Duck’s wider catalogue on Apple Music, and follow the artist on Spotify, Instagram, and Facebook.








