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OXFLOYD Captures the Suffocating Side of Heartbreak on ‘Oxygen’

By Lucy LernerMarch 5, 2026
OXFLOYD Captures the Suffocating Side of Heartbreak on ‘Oxygen’
Heartbreak as suffocation is the premise of ‘Oxygen’, the new single from Greek-born, Brooklyn-based artist OXFLOYD.
The song revolves around one striking idea: “you were my oxygen”. A simple line, perhaps, but it carries the kind of emotional weight that suggests dependency rather than romance. The sense that losing someone feels less like a breakup and more like being cut off from air.
Musically, ‘Oxygen’ leans into atmosphere. Dreamy organ tones drift through the track, while flashes of distortion add an edge that keeps the mood unsettled.
It sits somewhere in that same late-night space as ‘Still Don’t Know My Name’ by Labrinth. It’s slow-burning, hypnotic, and quietly intense.
The production, co-handled with multi-Grammy-winning executive producer Brent Kolatalo (who has worked with Bruno Mars, Lana Del Rey and Kendrick Lamar), gives the track a polished but restrained feel.
What stands out most is that OXFLOYD doesn’t try to tidy the emotions away. ‘Oxygen’ sits in the messy middle of things.
That push and pull between knowing someone isn’t good for you and still feeling drawn back. There’s no neat resolution, just the lingering aftershock of a relationship that’s left its mark.
With a debut project reportedly on the way, ‘Oxygen’ suggests OXFLOYD is an artist comfortable exploring the darker corners of vulnerability.

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