A Man From San Pietro – Further | When we allow signals to decide who we are

Contemporary identity increasingly seems to exist on unstable ground. “Further”, the new single from A Man From San Pietro, transforms that fragility into the core of a composition that moves with the density of a permanent electrical storm. Petar Dragicevic creates a landscape where technological saturation, the loss of reference points and the constant transformation of human experience converge into a narrative that never fully finds a safe place to settle. Unease is not presented as a temporary condition, but as a structural feature of the present.

The tension running through the piece emerges from a silent question: what remains intact when external forces begin to redefine our perception of ourselves? Lines such as “You let the signal name you” reveal a gradual surrender of autonomy, as if identity could be absorbed by invisible systems that determine the way we inhabit the world. The notion of the end times does not function as a conventional apocalyptic vision, but as a metaphor for an irreversible transition in which old certainties disappear and human connection gains renewed significance. Companionship ceases to be a sentimental refuge and becomes a mechanism of emotional survival.

Expansive stoner rock between distortion and electronic melancholy

“Further” settles within the territory of Stoner Rock while expanding its boundaries through textures borrowed from indie rock and experimental electronics. Distortion creates a constant sense of weight, while atmospheric layers introduce a depth that prevents the intensity from becoming monolithic. The composition balances propulsion and restraint, alternating moments of sonic friction with spaces that allow vulnerability to emerge without diminishing its expressive force. The result is a dense, expansive and deliberately unsettling atmosphere.

Searching for belonging amid digital noise

One of the composition’s greatest strengths lies in its refusal to offer definitive answers. A Man From San Pietro portrays a generation forced to negotiate with new forms of alienation while simultaneously acknowledging the persistence of our desire to remain connected to one another. The anxiety running through the piece never collapses into absolute isolation; instead, it leaves room for the possibility of building relationships capable of resisting depersonalization and restoring fragments of humanity to an increasingly synthetic environment.


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