Jordan Whitlock ‘This Is What It Feels Like’ - Echoes Across Silence In Collaboration With Memory Spells
- Sonic Sisters Team
- 22 hours ago
- 2 min read

Silence plays an unusually prominent role in This Is What It Feels Like. Not literal silence, but the kind that exists between sounds—the spaces where meaning accumulates rather than dissipates. Whitlock and Bauer demonstrate a keen awareness of this, using restraint as a means of amplifying emotional resonance.
The album’s sonic palette is unmistakably rooted in dream pop, yet it avoids the genre’s more indulgent tendencies. Instead of overwhelming the listener with lushness, it opts for clarity. Each element is given room to breathe, resulting in a soundscape that feels both expansive and precise.
Whitlock’s voice emerges as a focal point within this carefully constructed space. Her delivery is marked by an unforced intimacy, as though each line is being discovered in real time. There is a vulnerability here, but it is never performative; it feels lived-in, grounded in genuine emotional experience.
Thematically, the album is concerned with the tension between presence and absence. Songs like “Do You Think of It Sometimes?” linger in the ambiguity of memory, while “All I See Is You” captures the consuming clarity of emotional focus. These contrasts create a dynamic interplay that sustains the album’s momentum.
“Bloom” offers a moment of stillness that feels almost sacred. Its gradual progression mirrors the unfolding of understanding, each note contributing to a sense of quiet revelation. It is a track that demands patience, but rewards it with a profound sense of calm.
The closing “You Tell Me” does not seek to resolve the album’s themes, but to echo them. It leaves the listener with a sense of continuation, as though the conversation has merely paused rather than ended. In this way, the album achieves a rare kind of cohesion—one that extends beyond its runtime.



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