Find Emotional Connection in These 6 New Tracks

Today, 01/24/2025, Thalia Sophia released her latest track Crazy/Sanity. This is a poignant release that goes into what a relationship is like when one’s mental health is at play. Additionally, whether they have a hopeful tone or remain tracks of pain, every other track in this list explores the deeper side of emotion. Hopefully, you can find connection through the words and music shared in all of these releases.

Thalia Sophia – Crazy/Sanity

‘Crazy/Sanity’ has a nice sonic in the guitar bounce, and it has a distinct pluckiness that’s. Then as time moves forward, the bass kicks in with a bit more of a dancey bounce, and the percussion comes in to tie the flow together. The vocals are smooth, and like the rest of the track, they have a stellar and sharp production. At its basis, this is a pop track, but it also dashes in a Hispanic dance music influence. To add, there are some lyrics in Spanish, which stand out in sharing a diverse cultural influence. The music is fun and optimistic, and the lyrics explore love. But, as the chorus states, “My heart and mind they disagree.” The songwriting shares an aspect of mental health, likening a partner to being both craziness and sanity.

Jennie Angel – A Letter To My Past Self

‘A Letter To My Past Self’ is an acoustic country-based ballad with a great melody and amazingly produced acoustic guitar. The guitar seamlessly blends fingerpicking and strumming, and the warm buzz stands out nicely. As the track moves from section to section, the energy picks up, and more electric sounds are introduced. At 1:41, it’s mainly electric with a full band sound, and then after, it fades back into simple acoustics. The vocals in this track also are delivered with clarity, and they bend, riff, and flow so well. It captures a tale of growing up, speaking to the past self about struggles in growing up. “Guitar strings and broken dreams are all I have to show / For all these years spent on this winding road,” the chorus expresses.

Sara Diana – the villain

‘the villain’ takes mental health and emotions in a different direction, with a piano pop-balland instrumentation, and smooth alto vocals that have a lot of emotion in their delivery. Buzzy synths build into the music as the track moves forward, somewhat following the vocals. At around 01:10, there’s a pickup with a percussive entrance and a vocal evolution that gives them more rhythm. This gives some light rap influences but remains melodic. This captures a relationship in which the voice of the track ended up being painted as a villain by someone who played the victim. It captures the sensation of getting out of a rough spot while having to deal with backlash due to how one is portrayed by another.

Layna Lae – Throw It All Away

‘Throw It All Away’ is here to pick things up. This is an exciting synthy pop bump with dancey energetic vibes. It has enough energy to keep a bounce moving, but it doesn’t rush itself. It gives space for the vocals and message to stand out. The vocals work a lot with autotune, but they’re blended well with the electronic sonics in the instrumentation. This track depicts struggles, pain, and fear. However, it’s about letting go of those feelings and overcoming one’s anxiety.

Dj Remo – Lost

‘Lost’ was created as a tribute to a festival called the ‘Love Parade’. This is the most energetic track in this list, which makes it a great place to end things off. It works with an entrancing synth riff which the bass and percussion build off of well. This one basis provides a great point for the energy pickups and drops to flow around. There aren’t really vocals, but there is a spoken word bit. This bit explores pain, broken-heartedness, and feelings of being lost. Though it explores deep emotions like this, it’s about how feeling lost is a universal feeling that can connect people.

Written by Sage Plapp

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