“I Think About Us Sometimes” — Armin Morshed’s Hauntingly Honest Love Song Feels Like Falling in Love Again
- ALT RECESS
- Jul 7
- 2 min read
If falling in love had a soundtrack, Armin Morshed just wrote it.
His newest release, “I Think About Us Sometimes,” is a slow-burning gem that doesn’t shout—it lingers. It stirs. It aches. And somehow, it still glows. Imagine the emotional weight of a love you can’t quite hold onto, wrapped in ambient textures, kissed by jazz-soaked guitar runs, and tethered to a bluesy, soul-searching vocal delivery. Yeah, it’s that kind of song.
Part Pop/Rock. Part Jazz. Part Blues. All heart.
Morshed taps into something timeless here—a universal ache, the kind that comes from choosing between what’s easy and what’s real. The song doesn’t try to fix that feeling. It doesn’t rush it. It lives in that liminal space between hope and heartbreak, and that’s exactly what makes it so magnetic.
Sonically, “I Think About Us Sometimes” floats somewhere between the past and the present. It’s nostalgic without being retro, tender without losing its edge. Think Bon Iver meets Jeff Buckley, with a touch of Sade’s quiet elegance and the raw introspection of early Radiohead.
The real kicker? The ending guitar solo. It’s not flashy. It’s not trying to prove anything. It just feels. It shows up like a memory you didn’t invite but suddenly need. It’s the emotional exhale of a track that holds its breath the whole way through.
The songwriting is surgical. It cuts in the gentlest way possible—lines that feel like journal entries written at 2 a.m. when you’re halfway between sending a text and letting it go. There’s a kind of emotional fluency here that’s rare in modern songwriting—no pretense, no artifice. Just vulnerability, beautifully arranged.
Beyond its haunting beauty, what makes “I Think About Us Sometimes” hit so hard is its emotional honesty. Armin Morshed isn’t trying to tell you how to feel—he’s letting you feel with him. It’s therapeutic, in that quiet, late-night drive kind of way.
That might be the real heart of the song. This isn’t about tying up emotional loose ends. It’s about sitting with them. About honoring the discomfort of not knowing. About remembering someone who may not even think about you back—and still choosing to love them, in your own way.
In a world that constantly begs for clarity, “I Think About Us Sometimes” embraces the unknown. It whispers when everything else shouts. It confesses when everything else hides. It reminds us that sometimes, the most human thing we can do is feel, without needing to fix.
So put on your headphones. Lie back. Let the song wash over you.
And if you find yourself thinking about someone you swore you’d forgotten—don’t worry. That’s kind of the point.
