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I Run
2025 single by Haven From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"I Run" is a song by British producer and singer Harrison Walker, known professionally as Haven. It was released as his debut single on 29 October 2025 for digital download and streaming by Isekai Records, Broke Records, and Against All Odds. The electronic dance music and UK garage track was written by Walker and produced by Jacob Donaghue.
The song drew controversy for using artificial intelligence-generated vocals. It was pulled from most streaming services following concerns that the song violated copyright; nonetheless, the song achieved relative chart success, reaching the top 10 in Australia's ARIA Charts and Austria's Ö3 Austria Top 40.
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Release and composition
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"I Run" is the debut single by British producer and singer Harrison Walker, known professionally as Haven.[1] The song was released on 29 October 2025 for digital download and streaming.[2] It was issued through a collaboration between the London-based labels Isekai Records and Against All Odds, in partnership with Broke Records and Create Music Group, following the success of the Isekai-Broke collaboration on Ndotz's "Embrace It" in 2024.[1]
"I Run" was written by Walker and produced by Jacob Donaghue.[3] Running two minutes and nine seconds,[2] it is an electronic dance music and UK garage track that incorporates elements of lo-fi, trip hop, and downtempo with lyrics that evoke a sense of emotional escape.[1][3][4]
Use of artificial intelligence
The vocals are performed by Walker, "run through layers of processing and filtering."[1] Donaghue and Walker have confirmed that they used Suno's “AI-assisted vocal processing” to transform Walker's voice into that of a woman's, but maintain that they did not specify any artist to mimic.[5] The prompts used included "soulful vocal samples".[5] Despite the use of artificial intelligence vocals, Walker and Donague claim that the they wrote the song and produced it in ProTools.[5]
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Reception
The profile of Haven, which appeared on TikTok around the time of the song's release, drew attention due to his unknown identity and grew steadily, attracting likes and followers.[3] "I Run" was streamed more than ten million times on Haven's social media channel in under a week.[3] By 12 November 2025, the official sound had appeared in more than 25,000 user-generated TikTok posts.[4]
The song proved particularly popular among young audiences and was used in various TikTok content, including choreography, reaction videos, remixes, and emotional moments.[3] It drew attention amid a viral trend comparing the neutral, atmospheric qualities of dance-pop music commonly heard in department stores to those played in ski resorts and nightclubs.[4]
"I Run" accumulated over 290,000 official on-demand streams in the United States during 31 October–3 November 2025, and the following week (7–10 November) its streams rose by approximately 1,106 percent, reaching more than 3.5 million.[4]
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Copyright and platform removal
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In October 2025, British singer Jorja Smith publicly denied claims that her vocals had been used on "I Run", which led to speculation that artificial intelligence might have been employed in the production.[4] Walker used the hashtag "#jorjasmith" to promote the song on social media.[5] Smith's record label The Orchard and the RIAA issued multiple takedown requests, alleging that the song "misrepresents" another artist and thus violates copyright.[5] Walker and Donaghue later confirmed the use of artificial intelligence, though denied that the vocals were meant to imitate Smith.[5]
As of 12 November 2025, "I Run" was unavailable on Spotify reportedly due to potential copyright issues.[4] When contacted about the removal, Spotify stated that its platform "strictly prohibits artist impersonation".[6] On the same day, Andre Benz, CEO of Broke Records, posted an image on Instagram reading "All my homies hate Sony" in response to the song's withdrawal from certain platforms.[4] By 18 November, "I Run" was removed from most streaming services, including Apple Music.[7] Due to the copyright dispute, Billboard withheld the song from appearing on its US Hot 100 chart.[5]
Charts
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Release history
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References
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