M. Byrd - A Better Place (2025)

  • 15 Nov, 12:16
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Artist:
Title: A Better Place
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Nettwerk Music Group
Genre: Alternative
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 40:41
Total Size: 94.2 / 271 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. A Better Place (4:04)
2. One Way or the Other (3:58)
3. Bad Luck (3:33)
4. Always on My Mind (3:47)
5. Heavy Love (Part 1) (3:39)
6. Halo (Blue Letter) (3:15)
7. Walking (3:51)
8. The Heart (4:25)
9. My Starlight (3:26)
10. Underwater (3:55)
11. Always (2:53)

There’s a rare kind of magic that happens when an artist stops trying to chase meaning, and instead, lets meaning find them. On his eagerly-awaited new LP 'A Better Place', German singer, songwriter, and producer M. Byrd delivers his most personal and luminous work yet, tracing the tender contours of fatherhood, self-discovery, and the strange, beautiful chaos of becoming someone new.

Where his debut 'The Seed' hinted at introspection, 'A Better Place' plants those emotions firmly in the soil of lived experience. Written between Hamburg and Denmark, both before and after the birth of his first child, the album captures that liminal state between what’s ending and what’s just beginning. The result is an intimate body of work that feels both grounded and otherworldly, a meditation set to glowing synths, soft guitar lines, and a heartbeat of quiet optimism.

The title-track opens with cinematic restraint, glistening with the kind of melancholy that lingers like an afterimage. 'Walking' (featuring Nola Kin) drifts through dreamlike rhythms, while 'Always On My Mind' radiates warmth and worry in equal measure, channelling a parent’s love into melody. Every song feels like it’s suspended between inhale and exhale, as well as what we can hold and what we can only feel.

What makes 'A Better Place' so powerful is its paradox: it’s soft, yet immense; fragile, yet unshakably certain. Byrd's songwriting is cinematic but unforced, echoing the expansive intimacy of artists like Ben Howard and Leif Vollebekk, yet always unmistakably his own.

With 'A Better Place', M. Byrd invites us to witness the light flickering through changes within his own life. It’s an album about presence, and in its quiet glow, he’s found something close to transcendence.




  • whiskers
  •  18:31
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  19:38
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Many thanks.