The modern music scene is incredibly loud right now. Between endless social media noise, hot takes, and hyper-polished pop tracks that feel like they were written by an algorithm, it’s rare to stumble across a song that actually makes you stop what you’re doing and just listen.
Brooke Ligertwood’s new single, “Watchmen” does exactly that.
The Grammy-winning songwriter and platinum artist has just dropped a riveting, pop-infused track featuring powerhouse vocals from Lauren Daigle and The New Respects. Serving as the anchor for her new concept project, EAT, “Watchmen” is a bold, rhythmically driven sonic collision that proves high-level artistry and deep theology don’t have to be mutually exclusive.
The Two Worlds of Brooke Ligertwood
To really get what makes “Watchmen” so compelling, you have to look at the unique dual lane Ligertwood has occupied for over two decades.
On one hand, under her married name, Brooke Ligertwood is a pillar of modern worship. She’s written global congregational anthems like “What a Beautiful Name” and “King of Kings,” helping shape the sound of the modern church. On the other hand, she has maintained a highly successful mainstream pop career under her maiden name, Brooke Fraser—best known for the international indie-pop hit “Something in the Water.”
“Watchmen” feels like the moment these two identities collide. It carries the weighty, intentional lyricism of her worship material, but drops it right into the bold, aggressive, and unpredictable production style of her mainstream pop history.
Sonic Grit and Big Collaborations
Ligertwood has been open about the fact that her new music is meant to break through cultural static. She’s noted a weariness with the endless, opinion-heavy noise online, choosing instead to create a project where Scripture drives the narrative.
And she doesn’t do it subtly. “Watchmen” is built around punchy, driving drums, heavy bass, and an almost militant vocal arrangement. It completely bypasses the predictable, ambient swells of typical modern worship in favor of something with real grit.
Bringing Lauren Daigle and soul-pop outfit The New Respects into the fold was a brilliant move. Daigle’s smoky, soulful tone is the perfect counterweight to Ligertwood’s clear, urgent delivery, while the gospel-tinted harmonies of The New Respects give the track a vibrant, communal energy. It’s pop music, but it’s delivered with a bone-deep sense of authority.
The Verdict
In an era of short attention spans and background music, “Watchmen” demands you pay attention. If you’ve followed her journey—from the sonic experimentation of Brooke Fraser’s Brutal Romantic era to her massive stadium worship anthems—this track feels like the perfect, mature evolution of everything she does best. It’s infectious, it’s heavy, and it refuses to water itself down.


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