GENRE; Indie Folk/ Rock/ Folk Rock
RELEASE DATE; 10 December, 2025
RATING; 3/5
⭐️⭐️⭐️
I didn’t know what to expect when I pressed play on “To Be Named Between a Life and Another,” but within the first minute I felt that quiet pull you get when a song actually means something. Eternal Mourning doesn’t try to impress you with big hooks or loud moments here. Instead, it builds this slow, almost fragile atmosphere that makes you lean in. It feels like the kind of song you listen to alone late at night, when you’re not in the mood for noise, just something honest.
Philippe Mourani’s voice carries most of that weight. There’s a tired warmth to it, like someone who’s lived inside these words for a long time. You can hear the emotion without it being overacted. The guitars float and drift instead of showing off, and that choice really works. Pasquale Sacco knows when to step forward and when to stay in the background, letting the song breathe. David Ganon’s drums don’t rush anything—they sit right where they need to be—while Day Day’s bass and production quietly give the track its depth. You might not notice all the layers at first, but they’re there, holding everything together.
What I like most about this single is that it doesn’t try to explain itself. It just exists in this in-between space, somewhere between sadness and acceptance. That’s a hard feeling to capture, but Eternal Mourning gets surprisingly close. “To Be Named Between a Life and Another” feels like a small piece of a bigger story the band is telling, and it makes you curious to hear what comes next. It’s not flashy. It’s not trendy. It’s just real and sometimes that’s exactly what sticks.
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