Plàsi reflects on relationships in new song “Father’s Eyes”

Date:

Plàsi got his start in music during the wake of the pandemic. With the borders to his families’ home countries, Greece and Sweden, closed, Plàsi began exploring his identity as an artist and a songwriter. His new song “Father’s Eyes” focuses on relationships with parents.

“Father’s Eyes” is about wanting to stand out from your parents. Through steady percussion and gentle acoustic guitar, Plàsi reflects on moments where we choose to highlight our differences with our parents instead of finding similarities. His lyrics detail a conversation between a father and son trying to learn from each other. He shares more about the meaning behind the song:

“It’s about the toxic relationship we can have with our parents. We don’t want to see or learn from our similarities. Instead, we’re just trying to be different from them. The lyrics are like a discussion between a father and a son. You get both sides. However, there’s a hopeful undertone. Maybe we can learn from one another instead of focusing on our differences.”

You can listen to “Father’s Eyes” below.

Keep up with Plàsi: Instagram // Facebook // TikTok // YouTube // Website

Emma Celenza
Emma Celenza
Emma Celenza is a journalist at Melodic Mag. She is a full-time student at Syracuse University in the Bandier Program for Recording and Entertainment Industries with a minor in Sport Event Management. When she is not writing, you can find her in the cheapest seats at any Philadelphia or Syracuse University sporting event or spending time with her beloved elderly cat, Lola.

Leave a Reply

Share post:

More from Author

More like this
Related

Zara Larsson’s ‘Midnight Sun: Girls Trip’ radiates with female collaborations — Album Review

Recommended Tracks: “Girl's Girl” ft. Emilia, “Saturn's Return” ft....

Oliver Tree announces 2026 The World’s First World Tour following album release

Genre-defying artist and producer Oliver Tree announced he will...

On Your Radar: Ray Bull

Top Tracks: "The New Thing Dies," "Name Something Better,"...

Oliver Tree releases globally influenced fourth album, ‘Love You Madly Hate You Badly’ — Album Review

Recommended Tracks: “Crazy,” “Someone Else,” “Joyride,” “Flowers” Artists You Might...