“Intoxicated” is one of those rare dance tracks that instantly lifts the mood — a perfect storm of quirky production, irresistible groove, and tongue-in-cheek swagger.

Martin Solveig and GTA combine their strengths to create a playful yet impeccably tight house anthem built around a chunky bassline, brassy stabs, and a bouncy rhythm that refuses to sit still. The song’s instantly recognizable horn riff and the cheeky, half-spoken vocal line (“Let’s dance, no time for romance”) give it a character that’s both confident and carefree, channeling the kind of fun that defined mid-2010s club culture.

What makes “Intoxicated” shine is its balance of simplicity and precision — every sound has purpose, every beat lands exactly where it should, and the result is a groove that feels effortless but deeply engineered. Solveig’s knack for melody meets GTA’s punchy, percussive edge, producing a track that blurs the line between underground credibility and mainstream appeal. Its clean, funky energy made it a festival favorite and a crossover radio hit, but it’s the infectious sense of joy and movement that gives “Intoxicated” its staying power — a reminder that house music, at its best, should make you smile as much as it makes you move.