SAIAH Caps Off the Summer With the Idyllic "radio.fm"


Photo: Valence

Love is fucking magic, so much more powerful if you believe in it but always ready to sneak up on you with its splendor. Any artist that conjures up love like magic has a diablerie quality to their sound, and SAIAH’s most recent spell is "radio.fm," a track that arrives as the introduction to a blood-pumping night where anything and everything is possible. 

Hailing from Arizona via Pittsburgh, SAIAH admits to not being communicative as a child, using music and dance to find a place in their transitional world — that and a love for skating and Tony Hawk: Pro Skater. Embodying the supernatural energy of music, after a fractured relationship with a mentor producer, they started a path of creation that cross-pollinated between genres and influences. The results are immensely rich, a queer black voice that pervades genre descriptions, scripting a sound that feels like magic. 

SAIAH will be the first to tell you that their creative process is a form of alchemy, a process of taking lesser elements and making them sonically special, if often contrary in their delivery, “sounding sad but not sad.” In "radio.fm," the celestial good vibes of a night in Atlanta are encapsulated into this hi-hat-driven pop gem that shockingly came as a freestyle at the studio prior to a Travis Mills premiere.

Punctuated by guitar plucks, trap beat breaks and contemplative pre-choruses, the song spurs forth a feeling of liquid optimism and group hugs. The celebratory satisfaction, in accordance with SAIAH’s nature, is about propelling love into the atmosphere, like a radio wave, not always visible but heard and felt at a great distance. The forces that SAIAH conjures are indeed magical, but even if we don’t fully see what is happening, we’ll always been tuning in. 

Listen to "radio.fm" below:

Related Articles

LØLØ Spills Her Guts On Sophomore LP 'god forbid a girl spits out her feelings!'

LØLØ Spills Her Guts On Sophomore LP 'god forbid a girl spits out her feelings!'

May 5, 2026 Each track feels like an entry, yes, but also like a shift in temperature, a change in lighting, a different version of the same moment repeating until it finally sticks.
Author: Alessandra Rincon
pop
Sophia James Finds Synchronicity in the Unexpected in Her EP, The Wrong Shoe Theory [Q&A]

Sophia James Finds Synchronicity in the Unexpected in Her EP, The Wrong Shoe Theory [Q&A]

May 1, 2026 Merging jazz and pop into an undeniably fun sound fueled by curiosity, we had to know more about Sophia James.
Author: DJ Connor
pop
EP
GRESLEY Paints A Coming-Of-Age Masterpiece with 'Songs I Wrote Since She Left' [Q&A]

GRESLEY Paints A Coming-Of-Age Masterpiece with 'Songs I Wrote Since She Left' [Q&A]

April 30, 2026 GRESLEY wrote the album back home in his parents house, where he yearned for his sense of normalcy, the comfort of his longtime girlfriend back in LA, and explored the daunting, but exciting path ahead of him.
Author: DJ Connor
pop