Alternative Rock

Re:O and the Frozen Reverie: A Drifting Japancore Snowfall

today09/02/2026 19

Background
share close

Re:O Reverie

A moonlit city, a hand full of snow

Did you imagine a quiet walk through a city after midnight, snow already settled and streets keeping their secrets? Reverie by Re:O arrives exactly this way. The song opens under a bright moon, staring down at a cityscape of snow while a voice turns up in the distance like a memory.

Rio Suyama sings with that soft pull. As the track unfolds, drifting recollections surface, a frozen wind brushes your cheek, and snowflakes melt the second you reach for them. When the line hits – “I’m still here / Frozen, alone” – it stands there, breath hanging in the cold.

Guitars and synths – blades and touch

Then the band starts shaping the cold into something you can lean on. I hear the guitars cut in. After that, the synths pull the walls back, giving the track that cyberpunk glow around the edges. Distant, familiar, and oddly comforting at the same time. You also hear gentle bells coming in and out, like snow falling on your shoulders when you thought you’d already stepped inside.

As a listener, I love when heavy music keeps its nerve while still leaving space for feeling, and Reverie does that with real control: push, release, then push again, always with the story in front.

A new era, written in Japanese

Reverie marks Re:O’s 10th single, and the ignition of a fresh chapter: the first song they’ve written fully in Japanese since 2021. The theme circles around absence and time – people fade from view, connections loosen, yet the moments stay lit in your head. The wish at the centre feels human and plainspoken: may you always stay well.

Re:O brings a story that matters here. Rio Suyama founded the project in Tokyo in 2020, then rebuilt the band in 2023 with bassist James Wright and drummer James ‘J’ Stevens, with guitarist Alex Carli joining in 2025 for this newer era. Fans tag the sound Japancore, and you can hear why: metalcore drive, industrial bite, dark-pop sheen, and Japanese alternative spirit in the same bloodstream.

Stay close to Re:O on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X – just find your music that knows when to linger and when to leave you alone.


More ROCK below — press play and let it roll:

Written by: Flav


Join our newsletter for exciting news on the music business, artists, events and mroe!

+00:00