Miles Jeppson Unveils New Album ‘GREEN’
- Melodrift Team
- May 11
- 2 min read

Miles Jeppson’s Green feels built for connection: an album that understands how modern listeners don’t just hear music, but live inside it, repost it, and reshape it. Across eight tracks, the alt-pop artist constructs a world that is as visual as it is sonic, anchored by the symbolic pull of its title colour: growth, jealousy, renewal, and everything in between.
“INTRO” opens like a loading screen into something bigger, and that sense of world-building never really lets up. “NEW HORIZON” and “UP NORTH” feel expansive and forward-facing, the kind of tracks that translate easily into late-night drives, short-form edits, and shared playlists. There’s an instinct here for emotional accessibility without flattening depth.
The album really starts to glow in “ROSES & SPACESHIPS” and “DRIVE YOU WILD,” where Jeppson leans into bright melodic hooks and a sense of playful emotional volatility. These are songs built for replay culture: sticky, expressive, and easy to feel instantly while still revealing more on repeat listens.
“CRAVE” and “HEAL ME (Album Version)” slow things down just enough to let vulnerability breathe through the production. There’s a sense of emotional honesty here that feels unforced, like someone finally saying the thing they’ve been circling for a while. It’s not oversharing; it’s clarity.
By the time “CORE MEMORY” closes the project, Green has fully established itself as more than a tracklist, it’s a shareable emotional ecosystem. Every song feels like it belongs to a wider conversation, one happening across headphones, screens, and live rooms.
Ultimately, Green succeeds because it understands its audience as participants, not just listeners. Jeppson isn’t just releasing songs, he’s building a language.
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