Corban Chapple’s New EP ‘Maybe We’ll Make It’ Is A Transatlantic Meditation on Growth and Uncertainty
- Melodrift Team
- May 4
- 1 min read

Corban Chapple’s Maybe We’ll Make It is a debut shaped by movement—geographical, emotional, and artistic. Written during his early months in New York City, the EP captures the disorientation and exhilaration of reinvention. It is a contemplative work that balances vulnerability with restraint, offering listeners an intimate glimpse into the psyche of an artist navigating identity, ambition, and belonging.
Musically, Chapple crafts a soundscape rich in texture and nuance. Live instrumentation intertwines with contemporary hip-hop production, creating an atmosphere that feels both timeless and forward-thinking. Tracks like “Let’s Not Talk About It” embody emotional hesitation with understated elegance, while “Porcelain” examines fragility through layered perspectives, adding depth to the project’s thematic arc.
The EP’s greatest strength lies in its cohesion. Framed as a prologue, three acts, and an epilogue, it unfolds like a carefully scripted narrative, culminating in the title track’s poignant embrace of uncertainty. Rather than offering easy resolution, Chapple opts for quiet acceptance—an artistic choice that lends the record authenticity and resonance. In doing so, he announces himself as a thoughtful and sophisticated storyteller.
“What makes Corban special is his emotional precision,” says music publicist Danielle Holian, Decent Music PR. “He writes about jealousy, doubt, intimacy, and instability in a way that feels human, not performative. This EP is vulnerable without losing its edge, and that balance is powerful.”
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