Dua Lipa’s rise started with “New Rules,” a track that reshaped her from promising newcomer to global name. The song’s structure and visuals were calculated but clean—sharp, minimal, direct. From there, she moved quickly into more controlled territory. “Don’t Start Now” was her pivot: disco without nostalgia, tight without being cold. “Levitating” followed, slow to climb but impossible to shake, building momentum as her confidence settled into something sharper. Collaborations weren’t just filler—“One Kiss” with Calvin Harris wasn’t a feature; it was a takeover. “Cold Heart” with Elton John repurposed legacy without sounding borrowed. Even on the Barbie soundtrack, “Dance the Night” didn’t bend to trends—it pressed forward with her usual grip on rhythm and aesthetic. Her more recent work trades radio precision for layers. The tracks are cleaner, sometimes colder, but more deliberate. She’s not just chasing pop dominance anymore—she’s reworking the margins. The hits don’t burn fast. Th...