ORO speaks about what is perceived as “gold”: union with another person in its most luminous and positive form. But it also speaks about the bewilderment that comes with it — not quite knowing how to handle something so valuable. Wanting it, yet at the same time feeling fear or clumsiness in front of it. There is something deeply human in that contradiction: I long for union, I imagine it, and when it becomes possible, I don’t always know how to hold it.
It’s that fragile space between surrendering and pulling away.
It fuses ambient with contemporary pop, using synthesizers and atmospheres that build in intensity.