Break It Down
Single • April 1st 2025
A banger track I almost scrapped but ended up loving.
Story
This track comes from the same era as Spacewalk. If I hadn’t leaned into the whole narrative arc on that album, Break It Down probably would’ve ended up on there. It shares a lot of the same DNA, but it didn’t fit the bigger story, so I decided to put it out on its own. At the time, Spacewalk was stuck in limbo with a sample clearance issue, and I didn’t want months of silence. So I thought: why not drop this one now, keep the momentum going, and drop Spacewalk later?
Writing & Production
Break It Down is built around a really distinct beat loop. From the second I found it, I knew it had the kind of bounce that makes a track unique. The only lyric is the sample looping over and over, which gives it this “earwormy”, classic house drive. Simple, but effective, and honestly, it bangs. It’s got that “summer anthem” kind of energy, and if I had pushed it harder with promo, I could totally imagine it popping off in that way.
Mixing & Mastering
The release almost didn’t happen. Back then, I was still relying on Logic’s mastering assistant, and the first bounces sounded awful. The sharp lead synth in the chorus cut through the mix in the worst way, and I just couldn’t figure out how to solve it. I was close to shelving it. Then I tried out Ozone 11 for the first time, and honestly, it saved the song. Ozone pulled everything together, smoothed out the harshness, and made it sound like a real, finished record. That moment was a game-changer, like, “oh wow, my tracks can actually sound professional now.”
Release
After the mix finally clicked, I decided to go for it. It had been eight months since Imagination, and that silence felt way too long. Dropping Break It Down as a standalone single on April 1st just made sense. I wanted to show that I was capable of way more than what I did back in the first two albums. Maybe it came a little unexpected, but it was a way of saying, “I’m still here, still making stuff.”
Looking Back
Break It Down is a clean little snapshot of that transitional phase. It’s got the electronic energy of Spacewalk, but it sits nicely on its own. For me, it’s also tied to that “aha” moment of discovering Ozone and realizing how much the right tools could lift my sound. It wasn’t part of a bigger plan, but sometimes those are the tracks that hit the hardest.