The song opens with the declaration "I'm moving on the edge line I know / The only thing that saves me is love," immediately establishing the precarious emotional terrain that defines the track. It's a sentiment that could easily veer into cliché, but FOLLOWAY's delivery — recorded through vintage tube amps that lend his vocals a warm, slightly weathered quality — grounds the words in authentic vulnerability.
What elevates "In My Mind" beyond standard indie fare is its sophisticated understanding of space and texture. The analog production choices aren't mere aesthetic posturing; they serve the song's emotional core. When FOLLOWAY sings "Your shadow keeps haunting me / But in this time it's real," the slight tape saturation and classic microphone warmth make the haunting feel tangible, present in the room with you.
Lyrically, the track navigates the familiar territory of long-distance love with surprising dexterity. Lines like "You're running through my veins / But I won't let you go" could feel overwrought, but they're delivered with the kind of desperate sincerity that recalls early Arcade Fire or The National's quieter moments. The recurring question "Tell me, tell me — why am I following you?" becomes a mantra of romantic obsession that many will recognize from their own midnight ruminations.
The song's structure reveals a keen understanding of dynamics. The verses build gradually, allowing space for contemplation ("Ring me when it's silent / Talking through the midnight"), before the chorus soars with lines like "Don't cloud the skies / I'll soar above where your love lies." It's anthemic without being bombastic, personal without being solipsistic.
The cinematic music video, shot across Turkey and the UK, apparently captures this same balance between isolation and connection. While the visual component adds another layer to FOLLOWAY's storytelling ambitions, the song stands firmly on its own merits — always the mark of solid songcraft.
"In My Mind" positions FOLLOWAY as an artist worth watching. There's a maturity in the production choices and emotional intelligence in the songwriting that suggests someone who's thought deeply about both craft and feeling. In a landscape crowded with indie rock pastiche, this feels like the real thing: nostalgic without being backward-looking, vulnerable without being precious.
The track serves as both a strong standalone single and a promising glimpse of what FOLLOWAY calls his "movement" — an artistic vision that seems to understand that the best indie rock has always been about finding the universal in the deeply personal. "In My Mind" suggests he's well on his way to doing exactly that.
"In My Mind" is available on all streaming platforms.
