
You can hear the song here.
“Recall” was written in a two-step process: first, I wrote the lyrics on January 13, 2015, and then, two days later, on January 15, I composed the music to match the melody I had in my head. At that point, the song was essentially just the verses and chorus, a raw foundation of what it would eventually become.
The interlude music, the outro, and the lead guitar sections all came later when I started refining the track in the studio. That’s when the song really took shape, evolving beyond its initial structure into something more layered and expressive.
Lyrically, “Recall” is driven by a theme of deep reflection, specifically, the regrets people experience when they know their time is running out. It poses a haunting yet essential question:
“What real living can you recall?”
It’s about looking back and asking yourself, “Did you truly live?”
Or was I just going through the motions?
Because society sure as hell tries to judge people by what they possess, cars, houses, designer clothes, the latest overpriced gadget. But does that actually define a person? Not really.
What you own might say something about your taste, your income, or even your ambitions, but it says nothing about your character, your integrity, or your impact on others.
At the end of the day, people might judge you by what you have, but they remember you by how you made them feel. Possessions fade. Reputation sticks.
So, the real question is: do you want to be admired for your things or respected for who you are?
Anyways, let’s not get caught up in self development.
Because the best self development is music.
Crank it up. \::/

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