Liverpool’s rising dream-pop poet Tonia returns with “Serenity,” a soul-baring reflection on misplaced responsibility and the quiet ache of trying to save someone who doesn’t want to be saved.
Bathed in glowing synth textures and grounded by her signature soft-yet-cutting lyricism, “Serenity” floats between vulnerability and strength. Tonia’s voice is soothing, almost weightless, and guides us through a deeply personal reckoning with regret and emotional exhaustion. And just when you think you’re lost in its gentle waves, a second vocal enters — warm, masculine and grounding — adding an unexpected emotional depth to the chorus, like a ghost from the past that won’t quite leave. “It’s about trying to save someone who doesn’t want to be saved”, Tonia says.
“The emotional weight we carry when others refuse to carry their own.”
Written with her longtime collaborator Zander as part of the upcoming project “The songs we wrote in Norfolk,” “Serenity” feels like a confessional whispered across dusk-lit fields. It’s deeply introspective, but never isolating; more of a shared exhale than a solo cry. It’s the sound of learning to love yourself more than your need to fix others.