REVIEW: Lucas Jay — Sunshine (SINGLE)

Colin Jordan
3 min readSep 12, 2023

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Rising out of the silence with a soft but nonetheless present strut of the guitar, there isn’t any doubt that Lucas Jay means business upon listening to the opening instrumental salvo that gets his new single “Sunshine” started with a bang. The melodic fireworks are pretty potent, and even though they’re short and sweet in preparation for the vocal magic soon to come ripping out of the speakers in just a few brief moments, they’re strong enough to set up the mood without ever uttering a single word. Jay’s voice has enough weight to move mountains when he wants to, but I like that he begins this song by illustrating an aesthetical balance frequently overlooked by pop musicians of his age group.

INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/lucasjayofficial/

When we do get to the singing, there’s nothing powerful enough in this mix to hold the ground that Lucas Jay’s vocal does. He’s got melodic prowess like few others I’ve listened to in the pop music underground lately, and for our benefit, he’s exploiting his gifts for literally everything they’re worth in this instance. I would have backed off the strings’ volume just a little bit more than he did as we sway around the verses between the kickoff and the climax, but aside from a couple of surface-level issues like this, there’s nothing wrong with the means Jay’s employing to get to the promised land here. He’s got a lot of spunk, but he knows how to remain controlled when he needs to.

As far as the production quality goes, this is undisputedly the most radio-friendly sound that Jay could have chosen when trying to put the finishing touches on “Sunshine,” but I don’t think he should be criticized for going with something accessible when he was constructing this brand new single. He’s got plenty of reasons to break free from the indie beat, and if I were in his shoes and looking at the skillset he’s working with daily, I wouldn’t waste any more time trying to appease the impossible critics of the American underground. Jay has something marketable in his make-up, and I’m happy to see him using it the way it was always meant to be in this track.

“Sunshine” finishes us off with as much panache as it begins with, and being that it’s less than three and a half minutes long in total running time, it is the kind of song that you can listen to a couple of times on repeat if you’re susceptible to the addictiveness of modern alternative music. Pop music’s greatest heroes have always been those who didn’t play by the rules, and while it’s debatable how much of a solid rebel Lucas Jay is in “Sunshine,” what isn’t in question is how much he loves this genre. He’s putting every part of his soul into this performance, and I don’t think you need to be a trained music critic or professional arts journalist covering the emerging generation of stars in and outside of the mainstream market to recognize that at all.

Colin Jordan

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Colin Jordan

Graduate: McNeese State University, Avid Beekeeper, Deep Sea Diver & Fisherman, Horrible Golfer