Few artists can do what Seattle’s Prience Moore does, turn the mediocre into the cosmic grey of usual life. His current single, "No You And Me", showcases his ability to be a unique and compelling storyteller, one who shines in the small moments of everyday love and life.
Inspired by a mundane encounter inside a neighborhood supermarket, Prience guides you through an intimate exploration of relationships and everyday heartbreak no one ever knows. His words are tender, sketching out scenes that seem at once deeply personal and universally familiar to all of us. It’s a song that makes you stop, listen, and perhaps smile through the bittersweet.
Released by Michael Miller of Unlimitedtalents, it's a song with beautiful melodies and subdued, lush qualities that feels primitive and real to the bohemian artist priest, without thrashing Prince’s spoken words. Moore’s affecting vocal delivery and Miller’s agile production make a soundscape that is at once intimate and anthemic, one that creates the heady illusion that we can fully inhabit the story he’s telling.
The recording session for “No You And Me” was an eye-opener. Prience explains his words turned to music before his eyes for the first time, a palpable truth that can also be heard in the performance. The result is a single that not only entertains but also resonates. It’s the sort of song that sticks around long after the last note has disappeared, a gentle reminder of the beauty lurking within life’s ephemeral and often unnoticed corners.
