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Lovely Western music

[2026] A Collection of Western Songs with Titles Starting with D

This article brings together and introduces only songs with titles that start with “D,” selected from a wide range of Western music—mainly popular genres like rock and pop—from the 1950s up to the present 2020s.

When you think of “D,” words like “DREAM” or “DAY” come to mind right away, and there are surely plenty of songs that begin with a question like “Do you ~,” too.

It’s a concept you won’t often see on other sites, and it can even be used for a song-title shiritori game.

Be sure to check it out!

[2026] A Collection of Western Songs with Titles Starting with D (91–100)

Disappearbeabadoobee

beabadoobee – Disappear (Official Video)
Disappearbeabadoobee

Beabadoobee is a singer-songwriter born in the Philippines and raised in London.

Influenced by ’90s alternative and shoegaze, her sound beautifully fuses the intimacy of bedroom pop with the dynamism of a full band.

This track, included on her April 2019 EP “Loveworm,” features the word “November” in the lyrics and poignantly sings of the end of a relationship and a wish for self-erasure.

Layers of clean and crunchy guitars build from a quiet verse into an expansive chorus, as if translating late-autumn emotional tremors into sound.

The music video earned high praise, including a nomination at the 2019 UK Music Video Awards.

It’s a song that stays close to the heart—perfect for a contemplative night drive in November or as background music for solitary, quiet moments.

Don’t Go In The ForestAvatar

AVATAR – Don’t Go In The Forest (Official Music Video)
Don't Go In The ForestAvatar

Hailing from Gothenburg, Sweden, heavy metal band Avatar released their 10th studio album, “Don’t Go In The Forest,” on Halloween day in October 2025.

The title track unfolds a fable-like theme of temptation and warning about stepping into a forbidden forest, narrating the protagonist’s wavering psyche as they’re drawn to shadows and darkness yet unable to look away from fear.

Its distinctive sound layers weighty groove-metal riffs with an ’80s arena-rock-style gang chorus, blending horror-movie eeriness with pop uplift—quintessential “theatrical metal,” the band’s hallmark.

It’s a perfect song for those who, at the seasonal crossroads where the uncanny meets celebration, feel the urge to open a door to the extraordinary.

Drop It Low (ft. Chris Brown)Ester Dean

This is the debut single released in 2009 by songwriter/singer Ester Dean.

Featured on the soundtrack for LeBron James’s documentary film “More than a Game” and featuring Chris Brown, the track is a club banger characterized by tight 808 kicks and a thick sub-bass.

Its lyrics explicitly encourage dropping low on the dancefloor, and the highly repetitive hook sticks in your head.

The music video, directed by Joseph Kahn, highlights low-center-of-gravity hip movements with rapid cuts and strobe effects.

As an early precursor to the twerk context, it presents an empowering, female-led expression of dance.

Perfect for when you want to move freely on the floor.

DEATH CULT ZOMBIEGenesis Owusu

Genesis Owusu – DEATH CULT ZOMBIE (Official Video)
DEATH CULT ZOMBIEGenesis Owusu

Genesis Owusu is a Ghana-born, Australia-raised rapper and singer known for a boundary-crossing sound that, while rooted in hip-hop, moves freely through funk, post-punk, and R&B.

A formidable talent, he won ARIA Album of the Year two releases in a row with his 2021 debut Smiling with No Teeth and his 2023 follow-up Struggler.

His new track, released in October 2025, is a scathing satire of contemporary society, where dogmatism and fear shackle people’s thinking and turn them into “zombies.” With barbed commentary aimed at male-supremacist rhetoric and culture-war theatrics, the song hammers its message home atop high-voltage electro-punk guitar riffs and a four-on-the-floor pulse.

Produced by Dan Hume, it’s engineered with a punch that moves bodies both live and in the club.

DeliIce Spice

Ice Spice, who quickly grabbed attention as a rapper from the Bronx, delivers a track that distills her hometown pride and hip-hop spirit.

Added to the deluxe edition of her debut EP Like..? in July 2023, it fuses the bouncy pulse of Jersey club with post-drill minimalism, creating propulsive energy perfect for bold, hip-swaying twerking.

Though just over two minutes long, RiotUSA’s hard-edged 808s and insistent kicks naturally set the body in motion, while her signature laid-back delivery leaves a pleasantly spacious feel.

The music video, set in a Harlem bodega, packs the screen with celebratory energy as she turns up with her crew, balancing raw local heat with pop-ready flair.

Peaking at No.

41 on the Billboard Hot 100 and earning RIAA Platinum certification, this track superbly links a social-media-friendly short format with club-centered physicality—making it a prime candidate for any twerk playlist.