We Speak Music
Giulio Greco ‘I’ll Be Your Home’ Is A Gentle Haven of Sound
Milan-born artist Giulio Greco emerges with I’ll Be Your Home, a debut single that delicately balances introspection and universality. The track’s melancholic pop sensibilities are underpinned by Francesco Arpino’s understated production, allowing Greco’s emotive voice to carry the narrative of love, fragility, and emotional refuge. There is a cinematic quality to the song, a reflection of Greco’s multidisciplinary background in theatre, film, and music, which frames the piece as both intimate and expansive.
Raised across Italy, Belgium, and Germany, and seasoned through international creative experiences in Paris, Los Angeles, New York, and Tbilisi, Greco imbues the track with a cosmopolitan sensibility that feels both sophisticated and deeply human. The song’s lyrics resonate with quiet power, exploring moments of fracture where tenderness and connection emerge most profoundly. The listener is drawn into a space of reflection, finding solace in the promise of unwavering presence and care.
I’ll Be Your Home is more than a debut; it is an invitation into Giulio Greco’s world as a storyteller. It sets the tone for his forthcoming album, Believe – Coming Out from the Shadows, suggesting a broader exploration of resilience, renewal, and emotional transparency. With its refined craftsmanship and heartfelt intimacy, the single positions Greco as a thoughtful voice in contemporary pop, one who bridges personal vulnerability with universal resonance.
We Speak Music
Megan Burke Turns Personal Experience into Pop Catharsis on ‘Not All Men, Apparently’
Megan Burke’s debut EP Not All Men, Apparently arrives with a title designed to provoke conversation, but beneath its pointed framing lies a deeply personal collection of songs rooted in lived experience. The project sees the Irish artist tackling themes of heartbreak, deception and emotional recovery with an unfiltered honesty that has become increasingly rare within contemporary pop.
Produced by Hungarian hitmaker Áron Somody, the EP documents Burke’s journey through a series of difficult relationships, transforming private frustrations into universally relatable songwriting. Rather than presenting neat resolutions, the songs lean into complexity, examining the lingering impact of toxic dynamics while charting a gradual path towards self-awareness. It is this willingness to confront uncomfortable truths that gives the record its emotional weight.
Among the collection’s standout moments is Make Me, the focus track that introduces a welcome sense of levity. Written as a break from the darker material surrounding it, the song captures a more playful side of Burke’s personality, embracing independence and spontaneity without abandoning the candid perspective that defines the wider project. Its inclusion adds balance to a release that might otherwise feel relentlessly introspective.
Burke’s rise has been built largely on her ability to connect directly with audiences, amassing a substantial online following while earning notable milestones including a No.1 iTunes chart position and performances at some of Ireland’s biggest venues. With Not All Men, Apparently, she delivers her most cohesive artistic statement yet, confirming her status as a compelling new voice in Irish pop and a songwriter unafraid to tell difficult stories.
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