There’s something instantly cinematic about “We Made It” by Singer Muratti, released January 29, 2026. It walks that fine line between celebration and reflection, and honestly, that mix is what makes it stick. The production pulls you in first. You’ve got these nostalgic piano melodies laying the emotional groundwork, then layered synths start building around them, clean, bright, and very EDM-inspired. It’s the kind of sound that feels big without being overwhelming. You could hear this in a late-night drive scene or in a packed crowd with lights flashing everywhere. That dual vibe is intentional, and it works.

Also Read: ‘The Grief’ by The Sway: Guitars, Ghosts, and Growth
This song leans heavily into memory. Lines like “Halley’s Comet / Atari ping / Summer night / Cassette rewind” feel like flipping through old snapshots, random, specific, but somehow universal. It’s not just nostalgia for the sake of it; it’s about how those small moments stack up into a life. The references, from retro tech to cultural icons, give the track personality, but also highlight how much has changed.
Then there’s that shift: “No one waits like that anymore / And now machines that dream.” That line hits. It subtly moves the song from looking back to questioning the present. There’s progress, sure, but there’s also a quiet sense of loss in how things used to feel. The chorus is where everything comes together: “This is it / We made it / Look how far we’ve come…” It’s triumphant, but not in a loud, braggy way. It feels earned. Like someone pausing mid-journey to actually take in how far they’ve come, wins, losses, everything included.
Also Read: ‘Say Goodbye’ by Sunday’s Child: When Love Slips Quietly Away
Muratti brings a lot of emotion without overdoing it. There’s a slight edge in the delivery that keeps the song grounded. It’s not just polished pop, it feels personal. That balance between controlled and expressive is what keeps the track from drifting into generic territory. And by the time the song circles back to “Starship for Mars / This is it”, it’s clear what Muratti is doing, connecting past dreams to present reality. The future they imagined is here now, but it doesn’t look exactly how they thought it would. That tension is where the emotion lives.
FOLLOW ARTIST