What Molly Mogul mourns here isn’t the person but the psychic space they occupied.
Released 6th February as the second glimpse of her debut album A Bouquet of Hopes and Dreams (arriving 30 April), “100 Things (That I’ve Been Meaning To Say)” follows the artist’s own framing of grief as something tied less to a specific ex than to a feeling that never fully settled.
The Bristol-based German artist, working with songwriters Emma Delfs and Niklas Hoffmann alongside producer Yann Rose, constructs something uncommonly patient for a breakup song. There’s no catharsis here, no release.
The temporal logic fractures immediately. “I wish it was 2012 again / I never even would have known your name.” Not a desire to fix things, but to undo awareness itself. To be unmarked by the knowledge of someone.
That’s the real injury, the phantom limb of a connection that never solidified.
The lyric “I’m just a visitor” doesn’t land as metaphor but as diagnosis. She’s describing transience as identity, the feeling of always arriving temporarily inside someone else’s life.
Mogul’s voice, warm yet weighted, navigates soft piano figures and intricate guitar work that never swells.
The arrangement stays skeletal, eerie in its restraint, every texture pulling inward rather than opening out. It hangs like fog, obscuring rather than decorating.
The production mirrors the emotional architecture, everything dissolving at the edges rather than sharpening into closure.
The asymmetry stings most. “I’ve been waiting for five years / You can’t even wait one more day.”
That’s the maths of emotional imbalance laid bare, inequality written into the contract from the start.
The hundred unsaid things aren’t dramatic confessions but accumulations of restraint, the daily work of silence turning into its own climate.
What Neon Music hears is Mogul pushing the breakup song into the same in-between space that has defined her work so far, intimacy framed less as connection than as movement between emotional states.
Following January’s “Run,” another fragment of the album’s emotional map, this second single suggests an artist less interested in documenting relationships than in tracing the emotional negative space they leave behind.
Spring may frame the album’s release, but the psychology here feels colder, suspended between memory and refusal.
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