Dan Whitlam and Own Mind arrive sounding like a late-night thought you finally catch in the daylight. The track feels essential now because it turns self-talk into something sharp, human, and strangely uplifting.
The production keeps things close: clean pulses, a soft low-end throb, and a vocal that sits right at the front. Every detail feels measured, with enough air around the beat to let the words hit hard.
For a commute, a solo walk, or the ten minutes before a meeting, it fits the moment without trying too hard. The song leaves you a little clearer than it found you.