The song arrives as the first glimpse of his forthcoming EP 'Small Room, Full Heart,' a collection born from profound personal loss. Zauner uses music to pose questions that remained unanswered during his grandmother's lifetime, delving into the complexities of witnessing dementia's cruel progression. Where lesser artists might stumble into saccharine territory, fencah navigates these treacherous emotional waters with remarkable restraint and wisdom. His customised baritone ukulele—an inspired choice that immediately sets him apart from the bedroom pop masses—provides a deceptively simple foundation that belies the song's emotional complexity.
The arrangement is a masterclass in understatement. Gabriel Denk's guitar work shimmers with the kind of restraint that speaks volumes, while Michael Stöger's bass provides an anchor that prevents the song from floating away entirely. Jon Graboff's pedal steel—that most lonesome of instruments—weaves through the mix like half-remembered conversations, adding texture without overwhelming the delicate ecosystem fencah has constructed.
But it's Zauner's voice that carries the real weight here. There's vulnerability in his delivery that recalls early Kings of Convenience or the more introspective moments of José González, yet something distinctly his own emerges—a kind of world-weary tenderness that suggests hard-won wisdom rather than affected melancholy. When he poses those "unanswered questions," you believe every syllable.
The accompanying visuals, culled from his grandfather's archive, transform what could have been a conventional music video into something approaching cinema vérité. These aren't staged moments of artistic suffering but genuine fragments of a life lived—the kind of "small, seemingly ordinary moments" that only reveal their profound significance in retrospect. It's a bold choice that pays dividends, creating a dialogue between past and present that mirrors the song's own temporal fluidity.
What's most impressive about "One Last Time" is how it manages to be both deeply personal and universally resonant. The spectre of dementia—that cruel thief of identity—looms large, yet fencah never exploits his subject matter for easy emotional manipulation. Instead, he finds beauty in those "rare moments of clarity," suggesting that love persists even when memory fails.
The production, handled by fencah himself with mastering by Martin Scheer, deserves particular praise. There's space for every element to breathe, yet nothing feels undercooked or sparse. It's the kind of sonic intimacy that draws you closer rather than pushing you away—appropriate for music that deals with the increasing distance between the living and the dying.
As an introduction to fencah's world, "One Last Time" succeeds brilliantly. It establishes him as an artist unafraid to grapple with life's heavier themes while demonstrating the kind of musical sophistication that suggests great things ahead. If the rest of 'Small Room, Full Heart' maintains this level of emotional honesty and musical craft, we may be witnessing the emergence of a significant new voice.
When authenticity is often performed rather than lived, fencah offers something increasingly rare: genuine feeling translated into art without artifice. "One Last Time" doesn't just honor his grandmother's memory—it reminds us why music remains our most powerful medium for processing loss, love, and the terrible beauty of being human.
"One Last Time" is available now via Artig Recordings. The 'Small Room, Full Heart' EP is due near the end of 2025.