To mark the drop of her sassy new single Resentment, Briana Dinsdale’s serving up a playlist that’ll have you healing and thriving at the same time.
Briana Dinsdale (Supplied)
Rising Aussie country artist Briana Dinsdale is making serious noise, and she’s not here to play nice. Her latest single, Resentment, is her boldest yet. A fiery, country-rock anthem packed with attitude, empowerment, and a sharp sense of self-worth. Co-written with a powerhouse team and produced in Nashville, the track blends punchy guitar riffs, a no-nonsense beat, and lyrics that cut deep but with a cheeky wink.
At just 21, Dinsdale’s already proving she's a force. With a Top 10 finish at the prestigious Toyota Star Maker Competition and a #7 spot on the National Country Radio Charts with Real Time Love, she’s quickly carving out a space that's her unique sound where vintage country roots meet a fresh, fearless edge.
“I wanted Resentment to feel like saying, ‘I’m so over this and I’m having a good time anyway,’” she says. “It’s about knowing when to walk away, and doing it with confidence.”
To celebrate the release, Briana has put together a playlist that channels that same energy - bittersweet, strong, and a whole lot of sass. Press play and let Resentment be your soundtrack to letting go.
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Vibes are hotter without you, next chapter energy, mood: unbothered.
Memories and Whiskey – Brad Cox
This one sounds like crying into your drink at a dive bar but make it poetic. Brad perfectly bottles up the sting of remembering someone you really want to forget. If heartbreak had a hangover, this would be the soundtrack. You’ll sip, spiral, and repeat.
Heartbreaker – Homegrown Trio
This track? A serve. It flips the breakup narrative on its head and hands the mic to the one doing the walking away. Sassy, strong, and just the right amount of “you’ll miss me later”—basically, if Resentment had a cousin with attitude, this would be it.
Better Than Revenge – Taylor Swift
You know I had to include this one. Peak petty in the best way. This is the track you blast while speed-texting your group chat and plotting a glow-up so good even your ex’s mum says “you’re better off.” Therapeutic, chaotic, iconic. I love Taylor. My breakup song queen.
Your Momma Still Does – Ashland Craft
Nothing like a song that makes you say, “Ouch… but yeah.” Ashland gives us the kind of heartbreak where you’re not just losing them—you’re losing Sunday dinners with their mum too. Sad girl hours, but make it southern, soulful and punchy.
Sleep on My Side – Megan Moroney
This one is savage. Megan takes the high road—but not without quietly reclaiming her space (and her side of the bed). It’s the kind of song you cry to once, then play again with a smirk because you know you’re better off. Sweet, sharp, and sneakily powerful. Honestly? Let the door hit him on the way out.
It’s Just Raining – Avery Anna
Avery wrote the national anthem for “I’m not crying, YOU’RE crying.” This song is gentle denial wrapped in western-rock heartbreak. It’s giving: “I’m fine,” while clearly not being fine. Put this on when you want to feel all the feels but blame it on the weather.
Thinking Bout Cheating – Mae Estes
Mae does what a lot of people are too scared to say out loud. It’s bold, brutally honest, and complicated—just like most real-life relationships. It’s not about acting on it, it’s about feeling stuck, seen, and a little scandalous. And sometimes, that’s what honesty sounds like.
The Middle One – Kaylin Roberson
This song is one giant middle finger to the ex who never saw your worth until it was way too late. Kaylin turns being overlooked into a battle cry, proving the one they slept on is the one they’ll regret losing. It’s bold, badass, and built for blasting while strutting away like you’re in a movie.
What Are You On Fire About – Ashley Cooke & Jackson Dean
This one’s a pep talk in song form. Like someone shaking your shoulders and reminding you there’s more to life than being sad over someone who can’t even commit to Spotify Premium. It’s about rediscovering you—and maybe lighting a metaphorical match on the way out.
Songs We Used to Sing – ERNEST
If you’ve ever skipped a song on purpose because it reminds you of someone—this is for you. Ernest nails that weird ache of hearing your song when it’s no longer your person. Nostalgic, gentle, and quietly devastating.