Los Angeles’ own Jeffers Insley has re-emerged from the shadows with ‘Honey’—a sparse, slow-burning piano ballad that feels less like a song and more like a memory slowly reassembling itself. It’s the kind of track that doesn’t demand your attention—it quietly possesses it, floating in that delicate space between the deeply personal and the eerily universal.
Written in solitude during a week holed up in a remote Catskills cabin, ‘Honey’ finds Insley in a state of ghostlike introspection. The song began with a single line—“Honey, can you make this feeling last”—a whisper from the subconscious that bloomed into something altogether spellbinding. Insley describes it as a discovery more than a creation: “It feels more like I found the song than wrote it,” he says. “Which allows me to love it with a sense of detachment.” That detachment, paradoxically, is exactly what makes ‘Honey’ feel so achingly intimate.Sonically, it’s a masterclass in restraint. A solitary piano motif anchors the track, while Insley’s featherlight falsetto hovers like mist over morning water. Strings curl around the edges, and harmonies—barely there—fracture like glass under pressure. There’s a quiet tension throughout, one that never fully resolves, mirroring the way memory itself bends and warps over time. The result is a track that breathes and pulses in real time, unhurried and unashamed of its stillness.Fans of Jeff Buckley, early James Blake, and Hozier’s moodier moments will feel right at home here. But ‘Honey’ is no pastiche. It’s unmistakably Insley—confident in its atmosphere, rich in emotional ambiguity, and devastating in its simplicity. He doesn’t just tell you how it felt—he builds a room around you and lets the silence do the talking.There’s a raw elegance to Insley’s return. In a landscape crowded with maximalist pop and algorithm-chasing production, ‘Honey’ feels like a deep exhale. A reminder that sometimes, less really is more—and that the most powerful emotions are often the ones whispered, not shouted.With this release, Jeffers Insley isn’t just back—he’s made himself unforgettable. You won’t just hear ‘Honey’. You’ll feel it, days later, in the quiet moments. And you’ll wonder if maybe you dreamed the whole thing.