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Apr 4, 2026 / 2 MIN READ

My biggest song was named by a stranger on the internet

JAMES HYPE
James Hype — My biggest song was named by a stranger on the internet
3,000 strangers in a chat room named it number one.

My biggest song — the one with over a billion streams — was named by a stranger on the internet.

I made the track in my basement studio that I was renting illegally for cash. I sent it to my label and they sat on it. Months. Then more than a year. But I knew it was amazing, so I thought: what can I do here? I started playing it in every single DJ set. I'd just keep playing it until something happened. Every time I dropped it, people went nuts.

Then COVID hit. Everything shut down. No shows. No income. It was looking like I was actually going to have to get a regular job. But I had one last chance left — I found out I could take out a £50,000 loan to keep chasing the dream.

So I got my decks, set them up on a plank of wood in my living room, and started doing live streams twice a week. The first time I went live, 3,000 people showed up. It was amazing. So I kept going. Every week I'd drop this song and the whole chat would lose it. "What is the Ferrari song? We need this Ferrari song."

But the crazy thing — it wasn't even called Ferrari. It was called "Do You Still Want Me?"

Then the song started blowing up on the internet, and I found out someone was planning to release a copycat version. Literally the same as my song. I had one choice: let it happen, or move faster than I'd ever moved before in my life.

I went straight to the studio and finished the track that same night. Two days later we released it on our own label. We called it Ferrari — the name the internet had already chosen for us.

A few months later I was in Belgium, about to play Tomorrowland for the first time ever. I'd just landed in the airport, so tired, hadn't been to bed. My manager texted me: Ferrari just hit number one in two countries. One of them is Belgium. The country I was standing in.

A song I'd been playing for two years when nobody knew what it was. It finally caught up.

I made it illegally. Finished it overnight. Released it myself. And 3,000 strangers in a chat room named it number one.

What this actually means

the thing you know is amazing isn't going to get noticed by the people you sent it to. you have to put it in front of strangers, over and over, until they tell you what it is.

What to do today