Micah and the Mirrors have released their new single titled ‘Hungry Hungry Heart’, from the upcoming album album dropping May 1st via Spaghetty Town Records. There’s an immediacy to this track that doesn’t announce itself loudly, but instead pulls you in with a quiet confidence. It opens like a conversation already in progress, the kind where tone matters as much as words. The instrumentation feels deliberately restrained, letting the song breathe rather than overwhelm, while subtle melodic choices create a sense of forward motion that never feels forced. What stands out early is the balance between control and looseness — a song that knows exactly where it’s going but isn’t in a hurry to get there.

As it unfolds, the emotional weight becomes clearer. This is a track built on introspection rather than spectacle, favoring honesty over ornamentation. The vocal delivery carries a lived-in quality, as if each line has been tested internally before being released into the room. There’s an undercurrent of longing here, but it’s presented without melodrama — more reflective than desperate, more observant than accusatory. The lyrics function less as declarations and more as realizations, giving the song a sense of quiet gravity that rewards attentive listening.

By the time it ends, the track leaves behind a residue rather than a climax — and that’s very much its strength. It doesn’t aim to dominate your attention so much as occupy your thoughts afterward, lingering in the spaces between listens. In a landscape crowded with songs engineered for instant reaction, this one feels content to exist on its own terms, trusting the listener to meet it halfway. It’s the kind of track that grows more resonant with repetition, revealing depth through familiarity rather than flash, and that patience is what ultimately gives it its staying power.

About ‘Hungry Hungry Heart’

The second single release ‘Hungry Hungry Heart’ by Micah and the Mirrors is here, from the highly anticipated solo project from Micah Morris (formerly of Fast Eddy). It is slated to be a standalone powerhouse single. Harkening back to echoes of earlier songs he’s written, he takes it back to his deeper punk and rock n’ roll roots.

Taking notes off of some 2000s neo-garage inspired The Hives like energy and tone, along with a bit of the punkier side of QOTSA, the song is an energetic blast from the past. That said it still summons a fresh and modern take on an older sound.

Starting off 2026 with the second single off of the upcoming full length record (releasing May 1st, 2026), Micah and the Mirrors ‘Hungry Hungry Heart’ is a surefire way to satiate your cravings for a strong, blasting, and truly rock n’ roll experience. It may just be a snack, but it will hold you off for awhile longer till you can indulge yourself in the rest of the meal.

About Micah and the Mirrors

Born with Texas rhythm and raised on Rocky Mountain grit, Micah Morris has been kicking around the American rock n’ roll circuit long enough to earn every scar. You might know him from Fast Eddy or his earlier Six Shooter days, the kind of bands that smelled like gasoline and heartbreak. Now he’s steering into new territory with Micah and the Mirrors.

Morris comes from serious stock. His old man played with Austin staples like Christopher Cross and Double Trouble, his mom worked with Carole King, and somewhere up the family tree swings a Monkee named Michael Nesmith. That kind of lineage doesn’t hand you talent, but it sure lights the fuse.

From busking Denver sidewalks to cranking amps in sweaty dive bars, Morris built his sound on the long road: half punk, half rock ’n’ roll salvation. Fast Eddy gave him a taste of global airplay when Little Steven’s Underground Garage crowned their track “Take a Look” the Coolest Song in the World. But you can tell he’s never been one to sit still, too many ideas, too many riffs buzzing in his head.

So he packed up, hit Atlanta, and cut his first solo batch with Randy Michael (The Booze, Solid State Radio) behind the board and Dan Dixon twisting the knobs. Tortilla Soup is the appetizer, hot, loud, and dripping attitude, the kind of track that makes you check if your speakers are melting. The debut single is the first taste of his upcoming solo album, to be released on Spaghetty Town Records, the same underground label that’s been feeding garage rock junkies and punk purists for over a decade.

Micah and the Mirrors isn’t nostalgia, it’s a continuation. The sound of a lifer still chasing that perfect, reckless moment when the needle drops and the night feels endless.

Featured image by Jarrett Barnes.

LINKS:
https://www.instagram.com/micahandthemirrors
https://www.facebook.com/micah.morris.39
https://www.youtube.com/@micahandthemirrors
https://music.apple.com/us/artist/micah-and-the-mirrors/1844102617
https://open.spotify.com/artist/3e5NhwHnKLXmxDyBZZ8CgS