“Lamborghini Girls” Signals a New Era for ace of demons
- May 24
- 2 min read
ace of demons returns with “Lamborghini Girls,” the project’s first release since departing Berlin label Live From Earth and agency Reprise in 2024.
Out June 5, the single marks the beginning of a new chapter for the artist, whose work has long blurred the line between emotional collapse and high-gloss performance. Built around themes of instability, transformation and self-destruction, “Lamborghini Girls” channels burnout into a form of nightlife escapism — equal parts club track, emotional spiral and dark comedy.
Photo credit: Madeleine LaVoie

The track arrives after a year of personal and creative reinvention. Rather than framing the release as a comeback, ace of demons positions it as a continuation of an ongoing process of collapse and rebuilding. “Transformation as the only stable address,” as the artist describes it.
Musically, ace of demons has developed a style that pulls from hyperpop, club music and industrial textures while embracing abrupt tonal shifts and emotional volatility. Across previous releases, glamour collides with chaos: motorsport imagery sits beside emotional vulnerability, while camp aesthetics interrupt moments of heaviness and dread.

“Lamborghini Girls” continues in that vein. The single follows a group of outsiders chasing fantasy despite having little access to it, delivering lines like: “We don’t park the car baby we just let it crash.”
The result is a track that feels simultaneously euphoric and self-aware — a doomed victory lap soundtracking survival through instability rather than escape from it.
With “Lamborghini Girls,” ace of demons appears less interested in fitting into an existing scene than in constructing a world entirely their own: emotionally raw, visually maximalist and constantly on the verge of collapse.



