When two people decide to bare their souls to one another completely, love can be one of the most magical forces on Earth. But when communication falters, love can turn torturous and unbearably fragile. Wrapped in a blanket of delicate, wistful acoustic strums, NUKE THE SOUP’s new single “Lost On You” unravels the struggle of a lover just trying to “keep it all together” as his relationship teeters on the verge of collapse. This narrator doesn’t know where it all went wrong—when their connection shifted into misunderstanding—but he can feel the tension and detachment closing in.
Official Video for “Lost On You” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzwJEBIwJJc
Left to wonder whether they’re on the same wavelength, he asks the difficult questions, unsure if it’s already too late to salvage what they once had, only for her to echo his doubts right back. Yet the soft shake of the tambourine and bright synths suggest that not everything has slipped away, because they’re still fighting to hold on. Filled with quiet anxiety and tender devastation that seeps through every crack, “Lost On You” gives voice to the many who’ve felt love lose its way—striving to be heard even as their bond frays and falls apart at the seams.
Nuke The Soup is often heralded as a beacon of rare, nuanced simplicity—the kind of music that shimmers like the surface of an expansive lake, reflecting life’s scenery with a dreamy ripple that enchants listeners from the very first listen. Guided by creative highflier Mark Davison, the Baltimore-based project continues to evolve and surprise, crafting a distinct sound unafraid to embrace the playful, emotive, and even sophisticated sides of the human experience. All the while, they venture deeper into the inevitable unknowns, exploring original musical terrains year after year. “Lost On You” is from Nuke the Soup’s latest album, Dancing On The Edge, their most poignant and polished offering yet, brought to life by Grammy-winning producer Kevin Killen (U2, Peter Gabriel, Elvis Costello) and Gerry “Spooky Ghost” Leonard (David Bowie), and they’ve been generating buzz and acclaim ever since. Each track on Dancing On The Edge feels as if it comes straight from the heart of someone familiar—someone who knows what it means to love and to lose, to hope and dream, and to use music as a vessel for sorting out the mysteries of both the inner and outer world, one song at a time.
https://www.nukethesoup.com/
