
Jamaican singer-songwriter D’Yani is talking openly about what drove his new release Miss You Bad — a warm lovers’ rock number that sits in the uneasy stretch between heartbreak, longing, and the hard work of moving on.
The track gives listeners an early taste of his next album, Live Life & Prosper, set for August 21. It leans into how fiercely someone can ache for a person who is gone, until that emptiness starts to crowd everything else.
Sparse, eerie melody lines, live players, and D’Yani’s trademark gravelly voice sketch a bond that refuses to loosen its hold. He has said the record was meant to mirror how easy it is to lean on someone emotionally — even when that tie may no longer be good for you.
“My intention for the song was to capture the emotional pain of missing someone so deeply that their absence feels like withdrawal from an addictive substance,” he said.
Those drug-and-recovery images were deliberate, he noted, underlining the tug-of-war that comes when you cannot walk away from a fierce attachment.
“Through its repeated references to being ‘hooked’, craving a ‘high’, and ‘relapsing’, it portrays an unhealthy attachment where love becomes a dependency rather than a source of comfort. Despite knowing the attachment is unhealthy, there is an overwhelming desire to return, making the emotions feel both heartbreaking and relatable,” he said.
For him, the song finally lands on that fight between making peace with a breakup and clinging to what the relationship left behind.
“Overall, I try to paint a powerful picture of love, obsession, vulnerability, and the struggle between wanting to let go and being unable to break free from an emotional bond,” D’Yani said.
Miss You Bad again shows how he folds reggae, lovers’ rock, soul, and his own story into one sound — and it keeps interest high for Live Life & Prosper, a set expected to touch love, faith, growth, and finding yourself.
The 12-song project arrives after Journey, an uplifting cut put out in June with a live acoustic choir performance that debuted only on the GRAMMY Global Spin platform. Where Journey leaned into uplift, Miss You Bad pulls back the curtain on D’Yani’s softer side, weighing love, loss, and yearning.
Syndicated from Jamaica Star · originally published .
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