alternative rock dream-Pop

🇳🇿  Silver Star – A Quiet Light That Keeps Us Moving

 

 

2025,  The//Glow - Mild Orange ,

 

Songwriter : Josh Mehrtens , Jack Ferguson , 

Josh Reid , Tom Kelk , 

 

 

🇳🇿 **Mild Orange** has never been a band that relies on grand gestures or dramatic moments.

Instead, the New Zealand dream pop group creates music that feels effortless, intimate, and deeply human. "Silver Star," the fourth track from their 2025 album *The//Glow*, is another beautiful example of their understated style. It gently blends dreamy textures with subtle country influences, creating the feeling of driving through wide open landscapes with no destination in mind.

 

 

 

From the very beginning, Josh Reid's repeating guitar phrase sets the tone. 🎸 It's simple, warm, and almost hypnotic. Rather than demanding attention, it quietly settles into the background, allowing every note to breathe. Like waves rolling onto a quiet beach, the melody repeats with comforting familiarity. It's the kind of guitar line that lingers in your mind long after the song has ended.

 

 

 

🌾 One of the song's most memorable lyrics is the repeated line, **"Mustangs don't roam alone."** A mustang is a wild horse that has long symbolized freedom across the American West. Yet instead of celebrating solitude, the lyric reminds us that even creatures known for their independence often travel together. Freedom doesn't always mean walking alone—it can also mean sharing the journey with someone you trust.

 

 

That simple message gives the song remarkable emotional depth. Whether it's a partner, close friends, family, or the people who believe in us, life's greatest adventures are rarely meant to be experienced entirely on our own. The lyric quietly encourages us to value companionship without ever sounding sentimental.

 

 

 

 

⭐ The title itself comes from another beautiful line:

 

*"There's a silver star that glows

Keeps us riding along."*

 

The silver star feels like more than an object in the night sky. It becomes a symbol of hope, purpose, or even love—the quiet light that guides us forward when the road grows uncertain. We all experience moments when we lose confidence or wonder where life is leading us. Yet as long as that distant light remains visible, we keep moving.

 

 

 

🌅 Another lyric stands out because of its refreshing honesty:

 

*"And shit works out in the end."*

 

It's casual, imperfect, and wonderfully human. Rather than offering polished life advice, the song simply reminds us that things often have a way of falling into place. We don't have to control every outcome. Sometimes all we need to do is keep going, one day at a time.

 

That hopeful spirit continues with one of the song's strongest lines:

 

*"And for every minor setback

We'll bring a major comeback."*

 

There is resilience here, but it's never shouted. Mild Orange delivers these words with quiet confidence instead of dramatic intensity. That gentle approach somehow makes the message even more believable. Small disappointments don't define the journey—they're simply part of it.

 

 

 

🎸 Musically, "Silver Star" captures everything that makes Mild Orange unique. The dreamy atmosphere, restrained rhythm, and Josh Reid's endlessly repeating guitar motif create a sense of calm that feels almost meditative. The subtle country flavor adds warmth without taking away from the band's signature floating sound. It's music that asks you to slow down rather than rush ahead.

 

 

 

✨ In a world that constantly tells us to move faster and achieve more, "Silver Star" offers something different. It reminds us that every journey has its own pace, every setback can become a comeback, and no one truly has to travel alone. Like the glowing silver star in the night sky, this song quietly stays with you, offering comfort long after the final note fades away. It's another beautifully understated gem from Mild Orange—one that grows brighter with every listen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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SOME ALBUMS FIND YOU. THIS ONE WAITED FORTY YEARS.

 

There are records we hear, and records that hear us — that somehow know we aren't ready yet, and hold their secrets until we are.

 

Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants is that kind of record.

 

When I first came to this sprawling 1979 double album, I was looking for the Stevie Wonder I already loved — the architect of Innervisions, the genius behind Songs in the Key of Life. What I found instead stopped me cold: something vast, unhurried, and deeply strange. Music that seemed less composed than grown. I didn't understand it. I put it away.

 

Forty years later, I came back.

 

What I heard this time shook me. Not an artist chasing relevance, but one who had quietly stepped beyond it — tuning instead to frequencies older than fame, older than genre, older than language itself. This book is my attempt to follow him there.

 

Written across more than a hundred pages, it moves track by track through all twenty pieces — not as a musicologist, but as a listener who needed four decades to catch up. Part personal essay, part meditation, part love letter to a misunderstood masterpiece, it asks a question that may resonate with you too: what does it mean when a piece of art has to wait for you to grow into it?

 

If you've ever returned to something years later and found it transformed — or discovered that you were the one who had transformed — this book was written for you.

 

Available now on Kindle. Free for Kindle Unlimited members.

 

The most profound music never rushes. Neither does the reader it's waiting for.

 

— Toshiro Mori

 

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-alternative rock, dream-Pop

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