Detroit’s Chloe Moriondo has never shied away from examining the messier corners of love but “teeth” feels especially tender and honest.
The acoustic reworking appears on the deluxe edition of her third studio album (my world is an) oyster, which was released on December 5, 2025, and it pares the song down to its emotional bones in a way that feels deeply personal.
The expanded deluxe edition includes five new tracks, among them “teeth,” alongside other fresh material like “girls with gills.”
Where the original version existed in a dreamlike space full of electronic touches and indie pop energy, this acoustic is cosy and nostalgic.
Gentle guitar strums create a quiet base that lets her voice do the storytelling. There is a softness and warmth in the sound that invites you to sit with the feelings.
Moriondo’s vocal performance moves easily between speech and melody, as if she is speaking directly to you.
Light harmonies drift around the edges, each one coloured with a longing that lingers. The song circles familiar romantic patterns, the kind you recognise even as you repeat them. Moriondo traces those loops with a steady hand, noticing how the same desires and faults keep returning.
The lyrics focus on fixation and tenderness that bruises, on the strange pull toward things that leave a mark. Some connections lodge deeper than others and “teeth” sits inside that ache, examining it without flinching.
The accompanying video leans into the same mood. It is unfussy, and intimate.This approach mirrors the song’s emotional feel and makes the performance feel less like content and more like an open door into her headspace.
Across the deluxe edition, Moriondo sounds more contemplative. “teeth” is the clearest expression of that shift.
For fans familiar with her earlier work, it feels like a return to the impulses that shaped her beginnings now with a steadier sense of who she is and what she wants to reveal.
There is a confidence in choosing simplicity and trusting that quiet moments can carry the story and in this case, they do.
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