Growing up together, growing apart, and choosing to come back is the story quietly running through Nat and Alex Wolff’s new self-titled album. The album Nat & Alex Wolff feels to us, a moment of alignment where two brothers and artists had shaped separate lives for a while, and meet again with something real to say. Self-titled albums usually signal something intentional and personal. This one does exactly that. It captures who Nat & Alex are now, older and creatively assured, while still holding onto the emotional immediacy that’s always defined their songwriting.

Three Years Apart
Over the last three years, both the brothers, Nat and Alex, lived, worked, and wrote in different places, growing individually before coming back together with renewed purpose. You can hear that distance, and the growth that came with it, throughout the album. The songwriting is tight but unguarded. The production feels lived-in. Nothing is over-polished. And that’s the point. Tracks like ‘Tough’ carry the emotional weight of exhaustion, pairing breezy grooves with lyrics that quietly admit burnout. It’s resilience disguised as ease. Meanwhile, ‘Whole Other Life’ leans into forgiveness and perspective, sounding like a deep breath after everything you’ve been carrying.
Emotional Checkpoints Through Tracks
This album moves like a diary, with each track marking a different emotional state. So, we’ve picked out a few of our standouts that we know our hive will love. The song ‘Jack’ reads like a letter, maybe one you don’t really have the intention of sending. It’s ironic, sincere, and driven by vintage synths that add a touch of youthful restlessness. ‘Emilia’ is full of yearning, built on reverb-soaked guitars and vulnerability that stays with you long after the song comes to an end. Then there’s ‘Soft Kissing Hour,‘ the fan favorite produced by Billie Eilish, which captures the beauty of nostalgia.
Old Souls With A Present Tense
Sonically, the album draws from ’60s and ’70s folk and rock influences, but it never feels like a throwback. Instead, it filters those inspirations through modern emotion and restraint. That balance between raw spontaneity and refined songwriting is what makes this record resonate. It’s grown-up singer-songwriter pop that doesn’t rush itself.
What songs are you loving from the new album Nat & Alex Wolff? Let us know over on Twitter @TheHoneyPOP! Or, join the conversation on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok!
TO LEARN MORE ABOUT NAT & ALEX WOLFF:
INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER

