Chris Lafe King – ‘Neuroemergent’ EP

The newly released EP from Chris Lafe King, Neuroemergent channels lived experience with ADHD into a vibrant, personal form of pop storytelling. Across six tracks, King frames themes of burnout, reframing, and recovery within a mix of synth-driven textures, soulful vocal performances, and hook-friendly candor. Rather than polished detachment, the songs lean into vulnerability and personal prevailing, capturing moments of struggle and spark in equal measure — from the invisible barriers of “Wall of Awful” to the restless rush conveyed on “Hyperfocus.”

Neuroemergent is about moving beyond labels and seeing the possibility of growth,” King explains. “For me it means that with the right environment, our minds can create beauty and perspective out of chaos. Each song explores a facet of that journey, from hyperfocus to time blindness to the quiet grace of building systems that sustain us.”

“Wall of Awful” opens the EP with a dynamic tonal enjoyment. “This wall of awful appears, like I got something to prove,” King’s vocals stir, capturing invisible barriers that one confronts in life. “Breathe, breathe out, reframe,” a reassuring tone emerges as flashes of synths bolster the vibe-y production; the soulful vocals and thematic push — to push through that “wall of awful” — make for an invigorating success. The ensuing “Hyperfocus” succeeds in a different aesthetical vein, featuring dual-vocal chilliness within a laid-back R&B and acoustic pop styling. “Hyperfocus, I ride the wave,” the vocals exude during its magnetic chorus, conveying the power of a creative spark and its ability to light the way — even as that spark can prompt sleepless nights and a mental rush.

Another resonating success, “Time Blind” consumes in its array of spacious vocal moments and organ-laden blissfulness, as King laments it being “too loud to hear my shadow scream, too fast to feel the slipping dream.” It’s a poignant stunner, captured the hectic, blurry nature of days as they pass, particularly for those with ADHD and/or engaging in artistic endeavors. EP finale “Neuroemergent” also excels, enthralling right away with an expressive vocal call. “I turned chaos into rhythm,” King sings, celebrating neurodivergence as a source for power and creativity, rather than a hindrance. Bursting vocal vigor and electronic-friendly textures persist enjoyably alongside.

The EP succeeds in both its melodic savvy and overall thematic push, feeling like an act of reclamation — of using sound as a record of both chaos and clarity. In reframing limitations as creative fuel, Neuroemergent resonates not only as a portrait of neurodivergence, but as an open invitation for listeners to find strength in their own vulnerabilities.

Mike Mineo

I'm the founder/editor of Obscure Sound, which was formed in 2006. Previously, I wrote for PopMatters and Stylus Magazine.

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