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Someday With Lina Fouro – The Feel Song for the Grieving Soul

today23/05/2025 139 47 5

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WHEN POETRY MEETS LOSS AND A SPICE GIRL TRIBUTE STARTS IT ALL

We all lost someone. And I personally feel these moments – the ones where I appear strong, moving on, cracking a tired joke at work, or nodding politely at the coffee queue. But the heart’s the only one that really knows. It carries the silence in between songs, the sudden memories, the weight that never makes it into small talk.

Released on May 11th – Mother’s Day, not accidentally – Someday by Lina Fouro track is a slow, open wound stitched with melody and memory. But it’s not fragile. It stands up straight, carries its weight, and invites you to do the same. Some kids do ballet. Some obsess over dinosaurs. Lina Fouro? She picked up poetry at twelve and never put it down.

By the time most of us were scribbling secrets in locked diaries, she was on stage belting out “Wannabe” at her school talent show. That moment – pure, loud, fearless – sparked something deeper. A slow burn that would eventually turn into the song Someday.

That’s Nina Fouro walking into the spotlight again, but this time it’s not with platform shoes or glitter. It’s with something heavy, something raw, a song soaked in grief and built with reverence. Her latest release, Someday, holds space. It slows things down. I feel it as a track built for quiet moments, when reflection feels closer than noise. The kind of song that offers itself with honesty and waits for you to meet it halfway. Heart a bit heavier than you remembered.

Toronto’s own Lina Fouro has taken everything she’s carried – the loss of her mother, the ache of absence, the wild hope that somehow love stretches past this life – and folded it into a four-minute song. It’s a moment, plain and honest.

Someday Lina Fouro

SOMEDAY WITH LINA FOURO – A STUDIO OVERLOOKING THE LAKE

I’ve always believed that where you record a song matters. Put a mic in a soulless cube of foam and plastic, and you’ll get exactly that back in your vocals. But put Lina in Newcomb Studios, overlooking Lake Ontario in a quiet little town called Colborne, and what comes out it’s breath, ache, memory.

She didn’t walk this road alone either. Director John Petrella of DaVinci Cinema filmed the video in Niagara-on-the-Lake, which, by the way, feels like the kind of place where time pauses to listen. Producer and co-writer Kice Soroor shaped the track down the edges, tuning them so you feel every corner. And then there’s Hira Bulani, the quietly driving force behind Moviedom World, who bet on this song with the kind of faith that can’t be bought. Watch the video bellow:

The recording unfolded slowly, with care. Each rewrite, each new take brought the song closer to its core. The choices made were about staying honest. What comes through isn’t gloss. It’s heartbeat.


FOR EVERYONE WHO’S LOVED AND LOST, AND STILL LISTENS

I can almost hear Lina saying it to her mother – “I still hear your voice.” It’s a song for her mother, sure, but it’s also a lifeline for anyone who’s stared at an empty chair across the table, or whispered something out loud, knowing no one was left to hear it. And here’s the thing: I didn’t expect to feel this pulled in. But I did. Because grief isn’t tidy, it doesn’t follow your schedule. And neither does this track. It hangs with you after. It reminds you that while pain takes its time, so does healing.

Someday Lina Fouro

Lina Fouro has walked the modelling runways, flirted with acting gigs, and carved out her identity on stages and in studio booths. Go find her. Facebook. Instagram. Spotify. YouTube. Listen, follow, share – because stories like this deserve to be heard.

Written by: Flav

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