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

Dua Saleh’s “I Do, I Do” Review: A Sudanese Proverb, Desire, and the Cost of Wanting

By Marcus AdetolaMarch 12, 2026
Dua Saleh’s “I Do, I Do” Review: A Sudanese Proverb, Desire, and the Cost of Wanting

“I Do, I Do” uses a Sudanese proverb about consequence to examine desire you cannot outrun. Following “Flood” and “Glow” with Bon Iver, a pairing we covered in depth, Saleh returns here with something quieter but heavier in implication.

The track opens with an oud, played by Malek Vossough, rooting everything that follows in Sudanese identity before a single word is sung. The proverb woven through the lyrics carries a warning about greed and consequence alongside a fatalistic shrug at desire you know will cost you something. What you make, you eventually consume.

Saleh sings with a soft insistence that feels almost suspended in the air, airy but introspective, hovering over something darker moving beneath the surface. Producer Billy Lemos layers a warm melodic pulse over sparse percussion, the oud and Saleh’s voice moving together, each one carrying the other forward.

That darkness has a source. Saleh wrote this as war tore through Sudan, yet the lyrics stay rooted in the intimate, in a single person who won’t leave their thoughts. The personal and the catastrophic don’t compete; they mirror each other, the proverb about consequence sitting quietly inside a song about one person who won’t leave Saleh’s mind. Desire, extraction, consequence, the same pattern at every level.

The music video, directed by Braden Lee and shot against sparse desert terrain, makes that reading literal. Survivors pick through wreckage while Saleh insists, with complete certainty, that they already live inside someone’s thoughts. The vocal performance never wavers.

Of Earth & Wires is due May 15 via Ghostly International. On this evidence, Dua Saleh is making the most considered work of their career.

You might also like:

  • Tom Misch Steps Closer to Home on ‘Sisters With Me’
  • Erin LeCount’s “ALICE” Is a Haunting Portrait of Codependency and Addiction
  • Harry Styles’ “Coming Up Roses” Review: The Love Song That Knows It Won’t Last
  • Mitski – Nothing’s About to Happen to Me Review: Her Darkest, Most Honest Record Yet
Previous ArticleWhat Born to Die Really Means: Lana Del Rey’s Album Explained 14 Years Later
Next Article “All I Did Was Dream of You” by Beabadoobee feat. The Marías: Review and Meaning

RELATED

LOV’s Tell Him Finds Strength in Softness

LOV’s Tell Him Finds Strength in Softness

April 1, 2026By Lucy Lerner
Shaina Hayes Blooms Into Something Beautiful on ‘Flourish’

Shaina Hayes Blooms Into Something Beautiful on ‘Flourish’

April 1, 2026By Lucy Lerner
Guvna B – "Rest My Head": Accountability Has Never Sounded This Honest

Guvna B – “Rest My Head”: Accountability Has Never Sounded This Honest

March 31, 2026By Marcus Adetola
MOST POPULAR
Sing-Along Classics: 50 Songs Everyone Knows by Heart

Sing-Along Classics: 50 Songs Everyone Knows by Heart

By Alex Harris
Streaming Payouts 2025: Which Platform Pays Artists the Most?

Streaming Payouts 2025: Which Platform Pays Artists the Most?

By Alex Harris
Bombay Bicycle Club

A Great New Comeback From Bombay Bicycle Club

By Silvia Pellegrino

Charlie Puth – Whatever’s Clever! Review: His Best Album, and He Knows It

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 (www.neonmusic.co.uk) All rights reserved.

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