SHADOWS OF PRAISE

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TWENTY PAST MIDNIGHT: A REVIEW
 ON SAMIRA WYLD’S POETIC SYMPHONY OF BEAUTIFUL DISCOMFORT

From the opening notes of Sleepers, I find myself drawn into Samira Wyld's Twenty Past Midnight like silk pulled through water. This companion album and book breathes with the rhythm of midnight confessions, each track a doorway into rooms where comfort and unease dance together in perfect, terrible harmony.


Wyld possesses that rare ability to make vulnerability feel like velvet against skin. Her voice carries echoes of Vincent Price's theatrical magnetism. Yet it emerges entirely her own creation, deeper than ocean trenches, more intimate than whispered secrets. Wyld inhabits the liminal hour. That time when day surrenders to night and consciousness blurs at its softest edge.


This is not horror in any traditional sense. It does share that genre's fascination with what lurks beneath polished surfaces. But Wyld crafts something even more sophisticated instead: a loving embrace that tightens just enough to remind you of your pulse, a caress that lingers until it becomes almost too much to bear. The safety never disappears, yet the spine responds as though touched by winter air.


Her poetry moves like controlled demolition, each carefully placed word creating tremors that resonate long after the initial impact. The cognitive dissonance she weaves feels intentional as a musician's sharp note against the expected chord, beautiful precisely because it refuses to resolve into easy comfort.
What emerges from this deliberate cultivation of unease is something surprisingly tender. Wyld understands that the most profound intimacy often lives in those moments when we allow ourselves to be slightly, safely undone. Her work offers the rare gift of consensual vulnerability, permission to feel everything whilst knowing you remain held.


Twenty Past Midnight becomes that perfect paradox: a place where discomfort transforms into its own kind of solace, where being beautifully unsettled feels like coming home.

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Dusk Daughter