Dublin-based artist Presh returns with a quietly radiant new single, ‘This Feeling’, an Afrobeat-inflected slow-burner that arrives right on cue for sunnier days. Carried by warm piano flourishes and richly textured vocals, the track offers a moment of stillness – a space to sit with overwhelming emotions rather than escape them. Where some summer releases chase the high, ‘This Feeling’ lingers in something softer and more grounded: reflection, vulnerability, and raw honesty.
Built around stripped-back production from Victor Ezekiel, Folusho Ajala, and Presh himself, the track leans into minimalism without ever sounding bare. There’s a gentle pulse beneath it all — subtle percussion, ambient keys — but it’s the voice that leads. Soulful and emotive without overreaching, Presh sounds like he’s singing to himself as much as anyone else, letting the words land with quiet impact. This isn’t music that begs for attention — it earns it through sincerity.
Lyrically, ‘This Feeling’ traces the emotional fallout of online hyper-connection — doomscrolling through curated feeds while feeling increasingly isolated offline. Presh wrote the track in the thick of that experience, grappling with depression and a creeping sense of detachment. “I had thousands of followers online, but no one to call when I was breaking down,” he admits. That kind of brutal self-awareness drives the song, giving it the kind of emotional depth that lingers long after it ends.
There’s a clear throughline here with the rest of Presh’s work — a refusal to gloss over the hard stuff in favour of gloss or glamour. Originally from Nigeria and now rooted in Dublin, he’s built his name from the ground up, playing honest, heartfelt sets on Grafton Street and connecting with listeners one-on-one. That same directness is here in ‘This Feeling’ — it’s music that speaks softly, but doesn’t pull any punches.
In a landscape crowded with surface-level bangers, ‘This Feeling’ is a refreshingly introspective statement. It’s Afrobeat at its most restrained and soul at its most personal — a subtle yet stirring track that reminds us how powerful honesty can be. With this release, Presh doesn’t just share a song; he opens a door.