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Montreal’s Empty Melon Trades Sunlight for Shadows on Melancholic Experimental Pop Single “Don’t Look Away”

Created and developed in Montreal’s DIY scene, Empty Melon (the solo project of Ada Lea bassist/producer Summer Kodama) follows up on her debut single, “Hoping to Find,” with “Don’t Look Away,” an atmospheric, dark, and emotionally charged song that transforms late-night spiralling into something strangely beautiful. Blending experimental electronics, art pop textures, and cinematic sound design, the track embraces discomfort rather than avoiding it, finding clarity through directness, vulnerability, and self-confrontation.

Don’t Look Away” first emerged during a solitary drive in the early hours of the morning. “It started with spiralling while driving alone at 2am and improvising on the bass guitar,” Summer explains. What began as a fleeting emotional moment gradually evolved into a meditation on honesty, both with others and with oneself.

That commitment to honesty ultimately became the emotional core of the song. While the title may initially sound confrontational, for Summer it represents something much more personal.

“I think there’s a catharsis to expressing yourself and your needs with plain, direct language,” she says. “It allows you to facilitate an alignment with your most authentic self. Honesty is the most important component of self-expression.”

That sense of emotional directness is reflected throughout the production. Where “Hoping to Find” drifted through the hazy space between sleep and wakefulness, “Don’t Look Away” occupies a darker emotional landscape. Summer describes the two songs as “polar siblings,” with one basking in sunlight while the other emerges under the cover of night.

Written during the same month in May 2024, the tracks reveal two contrasting sides of the same creative period. If “Hoping to Find” explored rediscovery and openness, “Don’t Look Away” leans into uncertainty, introspection, and the courage required to face difficult truths head-on.

The recording process itself became an exercise in experimentation and trust. Seeking greater accountability and creative freedom, Summer found an important collaborator in Leo Bagel, keyboardist for Post NC. “I’ve been finding it extremely helpful having a collaborator to experiment with,” she explains. “I already feel two opposing voices in my brain, so the third brings balance, inspiration, and more accountability.”