Intimate, felt-dampened piano that captures the sound of the room as much as the notes. A quiet companion for deep focus or solitary mornings.
Shida Shahabi makes music that feels like a conversation whispered in a very small room. Her piano isn't the grand, concert hall variety; it is a tactile, mechanical object. You can hear the felt hitting the strings, the creak of the wood, and the breath of the space surrounding the instrument. It is deeply intimate and unpretentious, prioritizing emotional resonance over technical display.
What sets her apart is the patience of her compositions. She allows notes to decay fully, finding beauty in the silence between them. While many neoclassical artists lean into cinematic melodrama, Shahabi stays grounded in the domestic and the personal. Her work often incorporates subtle cello or electronic textures that feel like shadows moving across a wall: present but never intrusive.
Start with her debut album, Homes. It perfectly encapsulates her ability to turn a simple melody into a profound atmosphere. It is the ideal soundtrack for moments when you need the world to slow down, offering a sense of calm that feels earned rather than manufactured.
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