Blog

  • “We can change the game” – a song born from my deepest truth

    “We can change the game” – a song born from my deepest truth

    Some songs are created for a reason.
    Others are created because they have to exist.

    “We can change the game” is one of those songs.

    It was technically my third song, yet it became the very first one I ever released.
    And that decision took courage. Real courage.

    Why this song had to come first

    Even though other songs already existed, this one carried a message that couldn’t wait.

    Because “We can change the game” is not about entertainment.
    It is about remembering who we are.

    It reminds us that we hold more power than we often believe:
    • the power to think for ourselves
    • to choose what we believe
    • to raise our voices consciously
    • and to question things thoughtfully

    Not driven by fear.
    Not fueled by negativity.
    But guided by awareness, responsibility, and human connection.

    A message without fear, but with clarity

    This song does not encourage panic or pessimism.
    It encourages something much stronger.

    It invites us to:


    • question without attacking
    • think independently without dividing
    • stay open without losing grounding
    • and move forward together

    With friendship. With respect. With a shared vision.

    “We can change the game” is a gentle but powerful reminder:
    Change doesn’t require noise – it requires consciousness.

    A hopeful song for the future

    This song is for people who believe that real change begins within us.
    That dialogue matters.
    That unity matters.
    And that hope is a decision.

    Releasing this song first was not strategic – it was honest.
    It was ready.
    And I had to grow into that readiness.

  • Your Mama’s Worries – the first song I ever wrote and produced

    Your Mama’s Worries – the first song I ever wrote and produced

    Some songs are written.
    Others are felt before they ever become music.

    “Your Mama’s Worries” belongs to the second kind.

    This song is not only the English version of “Die Sorgen deiner Mama” –
    it is my very first song, the first one I ever wrote, composed, and produced completely on my own.
    And it came into existence quietly, honestly, and deeply from the heart.

    How “Your Mama’s Worries” was born

    The song didn’t start with a big idea or a clear intention to write music.
    It emerged during a very emotional, almost fragile moment – one of those moments where feelings become louder than words.

    It was about care.
    About love that never sleeps.
    About the silent fears mothers carry, even when nobody sees them.

    The melody appeared naturally.
    The lyrics followed gently.
    And suddenly, there it was – a story that needed a voice.

    A song that touched everyone who heard it

    When I first played “Your Mama’s Worries” to others, I had no expectations.
    But the reactions were overwhelming.

    People became quiet.
    Some were visibly moved.
    Others told me they felt seen, understood, remembered.

    Again and again, I heard:

    “This goes straight to the heart.”
    “That’s exactly what a mother feels.”
    “You can’t keep this song to yourself.”

    I was the one who hesitated.
    But everyone else encouraged me – wholeheartedly – to release it.

    Why this song matters

    “Your Mama’s Worries” is a song about:


    • unconditional motherly love
    • the emotional bond between parent and child
    • silent fears, deep care, and endless devotion
    • moments that shape us without making noise

    It is not loud.
    It is not dramatic.
    It is gentle, emotional, and deeply human.

    This song is for mothers.
    For children.
    For anyone who understands that love often comes with worries – and that both belong together.

    My first step as a songwriter

    This song marks the beginning of my journey as a songwriter and producer.
    It isn’t polished to perfection – but it is real, honest, and true.

    Looking back, I know:
    This song had to be my first one.

    Because it wasn’t created to impress anyone –
    it was created to feel something.

    And maybe that’s why it resonates so deeply.