Shanilee Eleria’s Incredible Running Up That Hill Street Surprise

Street noise, a little laughter, a brief moment of nerves, then one voice cuts through and changes the whole mood. The surprise is how fast Shanilee Eleria turns an on-the-spot street performance into a full Stranger Things flashback, opening with her love for the show before sliding into Kate Bush’s classic with total heart. No big setup, no drama, just a singer stepping forward and making the space hers. No wonder the clip keeps pulling in viewers.

She starts by admitting she’s a huge Stranger Things fan and says “Running Up That Hill” is a song she’s become obsessed with, especially after its massive return to the charts. Then the backing music comes in, and Shanilee takes the first line, “It doesn’t hurt me,” with a calm, steady touch that makes the chorus land even harder. There isn’t a flashy band or some oversized arrangement here, just Shanilee, the track, and a voice that keeps climbing as the emotion builds. Music Pulse readers will want to lock in on that first big “If only I could make a deal with God,” because that’s where the performance fully opens up. When she finishes, she adds the sweetest detail of all: it was her first time ever performing the song.

The mood of this video practically writes the comments for itself. “What???!! Best interpretation of that song What a voice! You sound amazing!” That reaction fits because she puts no distance between the lyric and the feeling.

“The title does not lie, this is an amazing cover, goosebumps the whole time, absolutely amazing” That one nails the whole appeal, because this doesn’t feel borrowed, it feels felt.

Why Shanilee and this song connect so well

Shanilee Tordilla Eleria comes across as the kind of independent artist people root for fast. Her music hub points listeners toward more of her work and makes it clear she’s building something personal, song by song. The song choice matters too. Kate Bush released “Running Up That Hill” in 1985, and its comeback after Stranger Things was so huge that WIPO even published a look at the Stranger Things revival. That gives Shanilee’s cover an extra spark, because she isn’t picking a random classic, she’s stepping into one of the most talked-about comebacks in recent pop memory. For readers who love another surprise performance moment, the young busker singing Easy on Me is a great next stop.

This Running Up That Hill cover works because Shanilee doesn’t treat the song like a piece of 1980s nostalgia. She sings it like a confession, keeps the performance stripped back, and lets that huge chorus carry all the longing, pain, and wish for understanding that made the song famous in the first place. That’s why it feels fresh even for people who’ve heard it everywhere, and why this ends up as one of the most touching street takes on a song that already means a lot to so many people, check the useful links below.

Final thoughts

What stays with people isn’t only the song. It’s the nerve of stepping into a public space, taking on a giant pop culture anthem, and making it feel close enough to touch.

If Music Pulse readers would like to see more from Shanilee Eleria, they can follow her on Instagram or TikTok.

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