Music
That’s Life
“That’s Life” meets uncertainty with a crooked smile. Rooted in reggae rhythms and sun-washed grit, the song leans into missteps, tension, and the constant feeling of being knocked sideways by circumstance. Words come out wrong, pressure builds, and control slips like sand through open hands. Yet beneath the chaos sits a steady choice: to stay grounded anyway. Gratitude becomes rebellion. Acceptance becomes power. When the cyclone will not let you win, you tip the glass back, let the sunshine hit your face, and release what you cannot hold.
Stay
“Stay” lives at the crossroads of restraint and temptation, where the responsible choice makes sense but the dangerous one feels irresistible. With funk driven grooves, simmering soul, and a sharp rock edge, the song unfolds as a challenge rather than a promise. Do you retreat to what is safe, or step closer to what could hurt you? Confident, playful, and knowingly reckless, “Stay” is not about being flawless. It is about choosing someone bold enough to remain when things are uncertain.
Firebird
“Firebird” is a declaration of refusal. Fueled by raw rock energy and relentless drive, the song confronts shame, manipulation, and every attempt to diminish or control. It speaks to the moment after collapse, when silence is no longer an option and strength returns with teeth. This is survival turned outward, defiance made audible. Once the spark is lit, there is no holding it back. Rise scorched. Rise louder.
You Are the Song
“You Are the Song” honors the person who restores sound after a long season of quiet. Written for someone who reignited creativity after loss and burnout, the song captures the fragile beauty of being seen and encouraged again. It moves gently from grief toward hope, carrying gratitude without erasing what came before. Love here is not a cure, but a companion that brings rhythm back to a life that had fallen still.
Burn
“Burn” confronts the cost of overextension. It lives in the moment when pressure, responsibility, and relentless drive collide, demanding a hard reckoning. Written during a period of balancing work, music, and personal commitments, the song centers on discernment rather than destruction. It is about choosing what deserves devotion and letting the rest fall away. Not everything needs to be saved, and not everything deserves your fire.
Drown
“Drown” is written from the brink. Shaped by physical pain, dependence, and the fight to stay afloat, the song captures the terror of nearly slipping under and the relief of being held in that moment. It moves through strain toward breath, trusting the hands that refuse to let go. Water becomes both pressure and proof. It is about exposure, rescue, and the fragile decision to believe you can rise again.
Revival
“Revival” traces the slow return from emptiness. Born from grief and the aftermath of deep depression, the song explores what happens when numbness feels safer than hope. Through faith, love, and quiet bravery, life begins to reenter the frame. Emotion builds gradually, mirroring the process of healing itself. This is not instant transformation, but the moment when endurance gives way to renewal.
Into the Wild
“Into the Wild” captures the courage it takes to leave what is familiar. Written around a family’s move to Montana, the song holds the tension between comfort and possibility. It reflects the suffocation of routine and the fear that comes with choosing change anyway. Driven by motion and longing, it embraces uncertainty as a form of freedom. No guarantees, no map, just the willingness to go.
72 Hours
“72 Hours” is love with the volume turned all the way up. Inspired by a volatile, deeply connected relationship, the song thrives on friction and release. It explores the intensity of arguments, the gravity of desire, and the pull that keeps drawing two people back together. Passion here is messy and consuming, but honest. Sometimes the chaos is inseparable from the connection, and sometimes the calm is only meaningful because of the storm that came before.