London-based duo Spirit Blue are no strangers to music. As hosts of the NTS early-morning show since 2021, they’ve spent years with their ears attuned to the best in ambient, experimental, and off-kilter soundscapes. Now, they’re stepping out from behind the decks and into the spotlight themselves.
After releasing their first single last June, Spirit Blue return with “language,” an independently released follow-up that’s every bit as gorgeous, delicate, and quietly disarming as their debut.
Melancholic guitar strums weave through whimsical, breath-soft vocals, while gentle, lulling drums hold everything in a slow, steady sway. Listening feels like walking through a forest on a cold grey morning. The track is muted yet intimate and strangely luminous. At times, the melodic dissonance deepens the experience, creating a subtle push-and-pull that mirrors the emotional tug of melancholy itself.
In the final section, the track slips into an entirely different pace. The atmosphere opens up and we enter a realm that feels almost devotional; the synths echo like distant church bells, while a bellowing electric-guitar strum ripples underneath. A soft crackling effect flickers through the mix, as if the song is burning itself into another dimension. For a moment, “language” lifts us out of the everyday and into something otherworldly, before gently dissolving back into silence.
The track is slow and intentional, landing not just in the ears but in the chest. Think Smerz, Mark William Lewis, Fine, and Dean Blunt rolled into one.