Taken from “The Thoughts We Can’t Tell” review by Illustrate Magazine:
Opening track “Inevitable” rides on grinding guitars and steady drums, while Mazur’s husky, high-toned voice delivers a reflective narrative of a past ruined relationship. When he sings, “It was inevitable that you’d pull away / ‘Maybe someday,’ you said / But I’m not gonna wait,” he is conveying that he’s accepted this to be his closure. Subtle optimism balances the refrain’s defiance, as the rousing “whoa-oh” chants come like a communal release.
Next comes “My Hypocrisy,” where cymbals spark and guitars jitter restlessly under Mazur’s raw confessions. He sings, “This is my scarlet letter / Branded with the ghost of who I’ve been,” as though he is reckoning with contradictions, haunted by past mistakes but refusing to let them define him.
The closer, “Just for Tonight,” lightens the load with glistening strums and a steady drum march, morphing into an anthemic sing-along. He sings, “Some nights I feel like getting loud / Some nights I can’t wait until they’re over,” capturing the fleeting relief of camaraderie against anxiety’s weight as he turns vulnerability into catharsis.



