Close Menu
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Trending
  • Lifestyle
  • Neon Music Lists & Rankings
  • Sunday Watch
  • Neon Opinions & Columns
  • Meme Watch
  • Submit Music
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Spotify
Neon MusicNeon Music
Subscribe
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Trending
  • Lifestyle
Neon MusicNeon Music

Paige – “tragedy” review: tender guitar, tough truth about one-sided love

By Marcus AdetolaSeptember 18, 2025
Paige – “tragedy” review: tender guitar, tough truth about one-sided love

New Zealand artist Paige strips things back on “tragedy”: soft guitar, close-miked vocals, and a plain-spoken confession about wanting someone who’s already drifting away.

It’s the third preview from her upcoming paigesspace project. 

The song starts with hush and space; acoustic chords under a voice that sounds like it’s being said to one person. 

As the arrangement fills in, the delivery stays gentle, which softens what she’s actually admitting: “I need you more than you need me.” 

That tension is the point; the sound is soothing while the story isn’t. 

Paige has already explained the frame: it’s about holding on through a one-sided relationship, feeling the other person let go, and staying anyway because being without them feels worse. 

Heard against the intimate production, lines about giving “until you’re empty” land like afterthoughts you finally say out loud.

There’s a thoughtful rollout around it. The single arrived 12 September 2025 on major platforms under Paige’s Sony NZ deal, with a lyric video up now and a full video set on a replica of her childhood bedroom due 19 September.

If you’ve followed Paige since King Clown, this fits her lane: delicate melodies, direct emotion, no wasted moves.

You might also like:

  • “Hold Me Like A Pearl” by Diane Emerita — Review — shoreline imagery and one-sided longing with a gentle sway
  • Margaux Regan – “Radio Silence” — modern ghosting turned into crisp, confessional pop
  • Ava Della Pietra – “Single For Life” Review — sparkling ’80s-tinted pop about friendship FOMO and choosing yourself
  • Kenny Sharp – “Amy” — soulful admission when admiration meets disappointment
  • Nolan Pierce – “Hold” Review — slow-burn reflection on love, loss, and attachment
  • Big Thief – “Words” Lyrics, Meaning & Review — close-room tenderness and careful restraint
Previous ArticleReuben Aziz – “Too Many” Review: smooth, summery R&B with a no-drama hook
Next Article Eli Carvajal – “Forever” review: soft strum, sharp memory

RELATED

Charli xcx “House” featuring John Cale Review: Wuthering Heights’ Gothic Soundtrack Debut

November 12, 2025By Alex Harris

Khruangbin – “White Gloves ii” Review: A Bittersweet Ode to Memory and Loss

November 10, 2025By Alex Harris

DJ Snake & Stray Kids “In The Dark” Review: A Nocturnal Anthem of Loss and Longing

November 9, 2025By Alex Harris
MOST POPULAR

5 Billion Plays: The 50 Most Streamed Songs of All Time

By Alex Harris

Sing-Along Classics: 50 Songs Everyone Knows by Heart

By Alex Harris

ROSALÍA’s “Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti” Review: When Sacred Grief Turns to Sound

By Marcus Adetola

NF’s Burning the Mansion Down: FEAR EP Lands 14th November with mgk and James Arthur

By Marcus Adetola
Neon Music

Music, pop culture & lifestyle stories that matter

MORE FROM NEON MUSIC
  • Neon Music Lists & Rankings
  • Sunday Watch
  • Neon Opinions & Columns
  • Meme Watch
GET INFORMED
  • About Neon Music
  • Contact Us
  • Write For Neon Music
  • Submit Music
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
© 2025 Neon Music. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.