ena mori drops new EP, rOe

As a global pop figure with an incredible sense of sonic adventurism, ena mori continues to forge a path that defies industry expectations. Her unapologetic individuality and fearless experimentation have set her apart from her contemporaries, especially in a landscape often defined by formula.


On her latest EP, rOe, the acclaimed singer-songwriter/producer steps away from the explosive energy of her full-length debut album, DON’T BLAME THE WILD ONE!, and instead offers a body of work that is as introspective as it is sophisticated. A coming-of-age project but not in a traditional sense, the 6-track release navigates the emotional whiplash of entering your twenties with one foot still planted in childhood. To sum it up, it’s about the paradox of forward motion while feeling stuck.

Through poetic lyrics and deliberately fragile soundscapes, ena mori constructs a world where innocence is haunted by memory, and wonder is complicated by doubt.

“One of the things that’s been giving me a lot of inspiration lately is my childhood,” shares the Japanese-Filipino soloist. “For this EP, I wanted to explore my memories and how I see them now, through the eyes of an adult. Maybe it’s a longing for that innocent state of being—or perhaps I’m just a little addicted to the comfort of nostalgia.”

Co-produced by ena mori in close collaboration with her creative partner Tim MarquezrOe strikes a balance between childlike whimsy and underlying ease. Every arrangement feels deliberately alive, evoking what ena and Tim describe as microbe-like: where the sonic landscape evokes interiority that’s pure in form but never polished to perfection.

The multi-awarded pop artist explains, “Tim and I talked a lot about the visual imagery of the album while we were working on the record. We gathered tons of photos and shapes for inspiration, but one of the main things we were trying to capture was this idea of “microbe-like” sounds—something that feels alive from within.”

Unlike the wide-ranging collaborative universe of her earlier materials, rOe was conceived in small rooms between two minds. Tim Marquez handled production duties with precision and restraint, while Sam Marquez (also of One Click Straight) brought intimacy to the mix. Mastering was executed by Emil Dela Rosa, whose subtle touch helped unify the EP’s emotional tone.

“The production process was definitely tedious at times, but every detail, every idea, we talked through and refined together,” reveals ena. “I honestly couldn’t feel more grateful to work with Tim. He’s not just incredibly talented; he gets me. Occasionally, he even hears things beyond what I imagined.”

The production aesthetic leans into unconventional textures, mixing string quartets with lo-fi guitar sketches, nylon-string plucks with harps, and layered vocal whispers with glitchy electronics. But unlike the maximalist art-pop of her debut album, the songs in rOe settle between dreamlike and disoriented, like memories remembered wrong but felt deeply.

Songs like “Trust Me,” written using ena mori’s limited guitar skills, are proof of how constraint can sometimes birth creativity in its most undiluted form. “Portion Control” and “Heartache Generation” channels crossover music with an endearingly vulnerable edge. Closing the EP with poetic finality, “Cub” carries one of the record’s most resonant lines: “I know the consequence of life, oh what a life / but I don’t want to live in a world of lies.”

It’s a quiet rebellion: a refusal to erase the child within.

ena mori’s rOe tracklist:
  1. rOe
  2. Portion Control
  3. Heartache Generation
  4. Sink
  5. Trust Me
  6. Cub 
ena mori’s new EP, rOe, is out now on all digital music platforms worldwide via Sony Music Entertainment and Offshore Music.



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