Nobody’s born cool. You either learn it young or spend the rest of your life faking it well enough that nobody notices. Tina Win has done her homework.
“How to Be Cool” is the Romanian-born, New Jersey-raised pop upstart’s sharpest release to date. If you’ve been following her since “Try Anything” dropped last summer, something about this one just hits differently. Harder to place, easier to feel. She’s grown into herself on record in a way that doesn’t need explaining. You hear it and you get it.
The production is brighter and more deliberate than anything she’s put out before. The beat runs just under 108 BPM, that steady mid-tempo that gives a vocal room to move without the song losing its footing. It’s not trying to do three things at once. It picks a lane and commits, which in current pop is rarer than it should be.
The mix favors the upper frequencies. Crisp, high-end shimmer that holds up through earbuds and still cuts through a room. The low end is present but restrained, which is the right call here because the vocal is the story, and the production is wise enough to stay out of its way. There’s a certain confidence in a pop record that trusts its singer this much.
Her vocal on this track sits in a different register than her earlier work. She’s someone delivering a verdict. The performance is precise without being cold, which is harder to pull off than it sounds. She stopped rehearsing the argument somewhere along the way and just started making it. That shift is audible, and it changes how the whole song feels.
The structure closes in just under three minutes and forty-nine seconds and knows when to stop. The arrangement pulls back in the final stretch before the track closes out. A small, well-placed choice that stops the song from eating itself. It breathes right before it ends, and that’s enough to make the whole thing considered rather than assembled. A lot of pop records don’t know that trick. This one does it without calling attention to it.
Commercially, “How to Be Cool” is practically pre-formatted for placement. Tight arrangement, vocal-forward mix, high spectral brightness. It will land well behind a campaign, under the opening of a show, in a trailer for something you’re going to watch twice. Whether you read that as a strength depends on your relationship with intention. Tina Win has been building a catalog designed to last and travel wide, and this track fits that blueprint. It’s a pop song first and a strategy second, which is exactly the balance most independent artists spend years trying to find.
She didn’t come this far to ask permission. Tina Win has been building quietly, betting on herself while the industry was busy looking elsewhere. “How to Be Cool” is what happens when someone figures out who they are on record and stops second-guessing it. The rules she’s rewriting were never hers to follow anyway.









