Willa Mae’s newest release, “2 girls in a trench coat,” is a study of self-doubt, duality, and the constant desire to be seen, with a name and a sound that lingers long after the last note fades. This brooding soft-rock anthem unpeels the layers of that familiar care, exposing the dissonance between outsized facades and inner truth.
Right from the opening note, “2 girls in a trench coat” wraps the listener in a stunning blend of raw vulnerability and cinematic depth that feels equally timeless and defines the here and now. Mae’s soft voice ascends and descends over gentle, swelling instrumentation, bearing the weight of a story many people share but few are willing to tell.
The song toes the tightrope of intimacy and detachment, striking at the bittersweet nature of connection: the deep desire to be with someone and the simultaneous fear that they’ll never really know you. That ugly honesty comes through in every line, drawing listeners deep down into the emotional depths of an artist undeterred by uncomfortable truths about identity and self-worth.
The song is a slow-motion symphony of swirling guitar tones, atmospheric percussion, and undulating melodies that swell like a rising tide before receding into a haunting echo. The production perfectly echoes the theme, with a delicate and powerful sound that reinforces the push and pull of self-perception.
“2 girls in a trench coat” is an experience. It’s the time you look in the mirror and don’t quite recognize yourself, the constant feeling like perhaps the world knows a you that isn’t even real. It’s a confession, a reckoning, and finally, a beautifully constructed musical work that sticks around in the mind like an unanswered question.
Willa Mae offers a sense of understanding for anyone who has ever felt like they’re walking through life in disguise. Now streaming: “2 girls in a trench coat.”
Connect with Willa Mae: Instagram