Imad, Amalle, and Sam Phay land “Altar” like a late-night signal you actually want to answer. The track feels immediate, polished, and strangely intimate, the kind of cut that makes a playlist stop scrolling.
Glassy synths skim over a deep, patient pulse while the vocal sits close enough to catch every breath. The mix stays clean and spacious, letting the low-end throb and the hook bloom without ever crowding the room.
That balance fits a gray commute, a kitchen dance break, or a headphone session when the city feels half-lit and alert. “Altar” sounds current because it knows restraint can still hit hard.