Myah - i don't know what i'm feeling (2025) Hi-Res

  • 30 Aug, 17:01
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Artist:
Title: i don't know what i'm feeling
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: peerless productions / Morgenstern
Genre: Alternative, Alt Pop
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 56:09
Total Size: 131 / 331 / 614 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. dissolve (4:21)
2. hurricane (3:55)
3. so serious! (3:32)
4. now or never (3:49)
5. it's a trap! (0:47)
6. toxic (3:54)
7. desperate (4:08)
8. always want you (3:41)
9. shut up (3:07)
10. sentimental (3:36)
11. strange phenomenon (0:38)
12. by the trees (we live to lie) (3:46)
13. some vibes (for now) (4:21)
14. glitter (4:09)
15. closure (0:46)
16. i don't know what i'm feeling (3:46)
17. dodging bullets (4:08)

Alt-pop artist and filmmaker myah, based in Los Angeles, has unveiled her debut album i don’t know what i’m feeling, set for release on August 29. Alongside the announcement, she shares the radiant single “glitter” and an accompanying cinematic video inspired by Bonnie & Clyde, 1950s aesthetics, and a dose of Scooby Doo-style mischief.

The upcoming LP features 17 tracks that explore themes of heartbreak, love, and personal awakening. It offers a deep dive into emotional turbulence across one’s twenties, threading together a bittersweet portrait of coming of age.

“It touches on the crisis you experience as you start to get older and realize that romance and love aren’t what you’ve been told your whole life… it can feel like you’re on top of the world one day and then like your whole world is falling apart the next.”

Each track in i don’t know what i’m feeling transitions smoothly into the next, forming one continuous narrative. Myah emphasizes:

“Every song is intertwined from start to finish and it’s meant to be listened to in order… and the truth is, I don’t know either. Because, well…i don’t know what i’m feeling.”

Her new single “glitter” is a softer moment in this journey, with reflective lyrics and shimmering pop textures. Myah explains:

“It was inspired by someone telling me they found my glitter in their apartment and thought of me. That really stuck with me, the idea of glitter as my calling card.”

The video for “glitter” leans into cinematic storytelling and unpredictability, with a cliffhanger ending and genre-bending visual language:

“It’s not what you would expect after releasing something so gory, and that’s the point. I don’t want anyone to be able to guess what world I’m going to transport them to next.”