Odesza – In Return

Album Info

Artist: Odesza

Title: In Return

Year: 2015

Cover Art, via Spotify (Click to View)

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Tracklist

  • 1. Always This Late (2:40)
  • 2. Say My Name (4:22)
  • 3. Bloom (3:15)
  • 4. All We Need (3:31)
  • 5. Sundara (2:16)
  • 6. White Lies (4:37)
  • 7. Kusanagi (3:28)
  • 8. Echoes (4:24)
  • 9. It’s Only (4:28)
  • 10. Koto (3:14)
  • 11. Memories That You Call (4:08)
  • 12. Sun Models (2:40)
  • 13. For Us (5:49)
  • 1. Light (4:13)
  • 2. IPlayYouListen - Live (4:29)
  • 3. Bloom - Live (3:30)
  • 4. Say My Name - Live (4:06)
  • 5. Always This Late - Instrumental (2:40)
  • 6. Say My Name - Instrumental (4:02)
  • 7. Bloom - Instrumental (3:01)
  • 8. All We Need - Instrumental (3:31)
  • 9. Sundara - Instrumental (2:14)
  • 10. White Lies - Instrumental (4:37)
  • 11. Kusanagi - Instrumental (3:28)
  • 12. Echoes - Instrumental (4:10)
  • 13. It's Only - Instrumental (4:20)
  • 14. Koto - Instrumental (3:14)
  • 15. Memories That You Call - Instrumental (3:43)
  • 16. Sun Models - Instrumental (2:24)
  • 17. For Us - Instrumental (5:29)
  • 18. Light - Instrumental (4:13)

Review

When In Return dropped, it felt like someone had bottled the bittersweet ache of nostalgia and set it to rhythm. ODESZA’s second album isn’t just electronic music — it’s memory in motion, swelling and shimmering like sunlight through fog. The duo threads together vocal samples, cinematic synths, and crisp percussion into something that feels impossibly light but emotionally heavy, the kind of sound that sneaks up on you mid–late-night drive.

Songs like “Say My Name” and “Bloom” pulse with euphoria but never lose their sense of yearning, while “White Lies” and “Koto” expand that emotional palette into something almost spiritual. There’s a delicacy in how ODESZA layers texture — every snare and vocal chop feels placed with intent, like brushstrokes in an impressionist painting. It’s music that builds worlds and then lets you drift through them.

In Return marked the moment ODESZA stopped being just producers and became architects of feeling. It’s an album that invites you to move, to dream, and to remember — even if you’re not sure what you’re remembering. - Lila