Dreamy, emotive, slightly poetic but still lively
Published
Green
Miles Jeppson
There’s something oddly luminous about Miles Jeppson’s Green, as if the album is constantly catching light in ways you don’t expect. It doesn’t rush to impress you—instead, it pulls you in slowly, like a memory you didn’t realise you still had. Across eight tracks, Jeppson blends alt-pop clarity with a warm, nostalgic ache that feels both personal and strangely universal.
“UP NORTH” and “NEW HORIZON” stretch outward like emotional road trips, full of distance, longing, and half-formed hope. Then “ROSES & SPACESHIPS” bursts in like imagination turned loud, while “DRIVE YOU WILD” leans into something more playful, almost reckless in its brightness. Even at its most energetic, the album never loses its sense of emotional control—it knows exactly how far to lean before pulling back.
By the time you reach “HEAL ME (Album Version)” and “CORE MEMORY,” Green feels less like an album and more like something you’ve lived through. It lingers in that space between healing and remembering, where nothing is fully resolved but everything feels understood. It’s tender without being fragile, and confident without ever feeling loud about it.