SINGLE REVIEW: westwell – A little of your love

westwell’s A little of your love moves with a quiet kind of grace — fragile, understated, and deeply sincere. It opens on a soft piano line that feels almost hesitant, each note carefully placed as if afraid to disturb the stillness. There’s something immediately human about it; the kind of song that doesn’t try to demand attention but earns it through honesty and calm restraint.

The father-and-son duo use that intimacy to full effect. The vocals arrive gently, almost whispered, full of ache and reflection. Every word feels deliberate — you can sense the weight behind the apology, the understanding that love and heartbreak can’t be neatly separated. There’s no gloss or grand gesture here; it’s raw in its vulnerability, and that’s exactly what makes it so affecting.

The piano remains at the song’s centre, guiding the emotion like a heartbeat. Its delicate melody wraps around the vocals, creating a space where sadness and warmth coexist. The track’s slow tempo and simple arrangement draw you in, giving the feeling of a late-night confession more than a performance. It’s hypnotic in its softness, allowing you to sit with the melancholy rather than escape it.

Yet amid the sorrow, there’s something cathartic. A little of your love feels like an exhale — a release of tension and regret that ultimately finds peace in its own quietness. The open, aching vocals radiate sincerity, never overreaching, just telling the truth. By the end, when the final piano notes fade into silence, it leaves behind a sense of stillness that feels earned — like the calm that follows after finally saying what needed to be said.

westwell have crafted something special here: a tender, minimalist reflection on love, loss, and patience that finds beauty in understatement. A little of your love is melancholy, yes, but also redemptive — a lullaby for anyone learning how to forgive themselves.

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