Interview with Spectrum in Silence
- Pigeon

- 4 days ago
- 4 min read
Updated: 23 hours ago

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Spectrum in - Silence Resonance
The debut album Resonance is a cohesive journey built on intimacy and dynamics, where minimal moments grow into powerful climaxes. Fans of cinematic alt-rock, introspective songwriting, and immersive moods will connect with its honest, human core.
Interview with Spectrum in Silence

How did Spectrum in Silence begin as a project, and what did you want it to express emotionally?
Spectrum in Silence began as a very personal project. It wasn’t created with a scene, a market, or expectations in mind. It started as a need to release emotions that were staying unspoken for a long time. I wanted to give form to feelings like isolation, quiet tension, and inner reflection, things that often exist beneath the surface of everyday life. Emotionally, the project was about turning silence into something expressive, allowing what’s usually hidden to finally be heard.

The name Spectrum in Silence is very evocative. What does it represent for you creatively?
The name represents the idea that even in silence, there is a full spectrum of emotions, thoughts, and inner movement. Silence is never empty. Creatively, it reflects my approach to music: subtle details, dynamics, and emotional layers that reveal themselves gradually. It’s about contrast, light and shadow, softness and intensity coexisting without needing to be loud all the time.

Resonance feels like a carefully shaped journey rather than a collection of songs. How did you approach building the album as a cohesive experience?
From the beginning, I approached Resonance as a single emotional arc rather than individual tracks. I paid close attention to pacing, dynamics, and how one song flows into the next. Each track represents a different emotional state, but they all exist within the same world. The goal was to create an immersive listening experience, where the album feels like a continuous journey that unfolds naturally rather than a playlist of separate ideas.

Themes of isolation, vulnerability, and quiet resilience run throughout your music. Where do these themes come from in your own life or mindset?
These themes come from personal experiences and long periods of introspection. Isolation doesn’t always mean being alone physically, sometimes it’s about feeling disconnected even when surrounded by others. Vulnerability comes from allowing those emotions to exist without masking them. Quiet resilience, for me, is about endurance without noise, continuing forward without needing validation. These ideas naturally found their way into the music because they reflect how I observe and process life.

Your sound blends art rock, alternative rock, ambient textures, and subtle electronics. How do you balance atmosphere with melody and raw guitar energy?
Balance comes from intention. Atmosphere sets the emotional space, melody gives it direction, and guitars provide the raw physical energy. I never want one element to overpower the others. Instead, they support each other. Ambient and electronic elements create depth and breathing room, while guitars and vocals ground the songs emotionally. It’s always about serving the feeling of the track rather than showcasing a specific sound.
How did your influences from ’90s and ’00s rock shape the sound of Spectrum in Silence, and how did you modernize them?
The ’90s and ’00s influences shaped my sense of dynamics, emotional honesty, and song structure. Artists from that era weren’t afraid of space, tension, or vulnerability. To modernize that influence, I focused on contemporary production techniques, cleaner sound design, and subtle electronic textures. The result is something familiar in spirit but current in execution, rooted in emotion rather than nostalgia.

The singles “I Don’t Belong,” “Wired Awake,” and “Unbroken” each feel emotionally distinct. What connects them beneath the surface?
What connects them is the idea of inner conflict and self-awareness. Each song explores a different response to pressure: alienation, anxiety, and resilience. Beneath their different moods, they all deal with the same core question: how do we survive emotionally in a world that constantly demands more from us? They are different chapters of the same internal conversation.

There is a strong cinematic quality to your music. Do you think visually when writing and producing songs?
Yes, very much so. I often imagine scenes, environments, or emotional landscapes while writing. I think in terms of movement, tension, and release, almost like framing shots in a film. This visual mindset helps guide arrangements, transitions, and dynamics, making the music feel immersive rather than static.

What does the title Resonance mean to you, both musically and emotionally?
Musically, resonance is about how sound lingers and interacts with space. Emotionally, it represents how experiences stay with us long after the moment has passed. The album explores how certain feelings, memories, and moments continue to vibrate inside us, shaping who we are. Resonance is about those lasting emotional echoes.

What do you hope listeners feel or reflect on after spending time with this album?
I hope listeners feel understood, even in moments of discomfort or vulnerability. I don’t want to provide answers, but rather space for reflection. If the album encourages someone to slow down, sit with their emotions, or feel less alone in their inner world, then it has done what it was meant to do.
(•)> That's all, Folks! Check out Spectrum in Silence on the Pigeon Spins Playlist
