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Samantha Gail B. Lucas

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Filipino-Japanese artist ena mori hardens the edges on her 2026 EP, Ore

February 27, 2026

Sharper in tone and stronger in stance, Ore transforms cultural memory and adulthood into abrasive pop anthems

In 2025, ena mori reaffirmed her position as one of the most compelling creative forces in Asian pop music. The avant-pop shapeshifter greeted the year with high-profile festival appearances, brand deals, and a growing international listenership, culminating in the release of her six-track EP rOe. Informed by restraint and emotional fragility, rOe showcased ena mori’s ability to translate vulnerability into a riveting pop fantasia. As expected, the EP earned universal praise from critics and fans, landing on several year-end lists across the globe.

Today, February 27, 2026, ena mori completes that orbit with Ore, a six-track companion piece that both mirrors and resists its predecessor. Originally conceived alongside rOe as part of a single body of work before unraveling themselves as fraternal counterparts, the two projects diverge in tone and intent, with the latter retaining emotional nuance while foregrounding sharper textures and stronger assertions.

“As I worked on new songs, I started to feel it would be a better representation if I separated them into two,” the Heartbreak Generation singer-songwriter reveals. “With Ore, I wanted this record to have an edge—a rough texture in its feel—while still sharing the soft and delicate feeling of rOe. Ore is kind of like a bigger sister to rOe: more direct and opinionated, rougher and grittier in appearance, and not afraid to speak her mind.”

Conceptually, Ore traces ena’s passage into adulthood, confronting emotions she once avoided and approaching them with greater clarity and resolve. The EP reflects on independence, uncertainty, and the process of defining oneself outside inherent expectations. In shaping chaos into form, the acclaimed indie pop star found herself quietly repairing—healing to an extent.

As a Filipina-Japanese straddling cultures, ena locates Orewithin a deeply personal geography. Cultural identity remains central to the record, so intact and specific, it cuts through the fiber of every track in the EP.

“As I listen back to the record, I realize that it captures a very Asian experience,” ena recounts. “Growing up in an Asian household, surrounded by its values, taboos, societal pressures, and hidden passions, has shaped the way I perceive the world. Navigating my twenties between two cultures—sometimes similar, sometimes polar opposites, braided together.” The EP carries the ambient imprints of her life as is: rainstorms, rice cooker chimes, arcade noise, hot wind against a truck horn.

 

Produced in close collaboration with Tim Marquez, Oreemphasizes abrasive, disjointed soundscapes over the fluid softness that defined rOe. The project was mixed by Sam Marquez and mastered by Emil Dela Rosa, whose finishing touches preserve both its sharpness and its air.

 

“Tim and I gravitated toward sounds with humps and bumps—textures that feel tactile in an auditory way. Some might even find them unpleasant or irritating. But that friction felt honest.”

 

Across its six tracks, Ore balances dance-oriented momentum with reflective lyricism. The arrangements are lean but deliberate, allowing percussive elements and synth lines to carry emotional weight without overwhelming the vocal center. It’s club music without the need to feel escapist: to be specific, it’s music for dimly lit rooms, for underground spaces where self-discovery feels more communal than solitary.

 

The focus track “19 Underground” anchors the EP’s narrative. Written from the vantage point of a nineteen-year-old teenager trying to figure things out on her own, the song captures her artistic and personal awakening, but most of all, the year when she finally found her tribe. Ena adds,“I chose it as a focus track because it carries that belief: that nothing is born from a single soul. Music is communal, even when you write it alone. We inspire each other, we bruise each other, we love each other. That friction, is the great human exchange.”

 

Tracklist - Ore

 

1. Funny

2. Insomnia

3. Ore

4. 19 Underground (FOCUS TRACK)

5. La Loba

6. Pomegranates

 

 

ena mori’s Ore is out now on all digital music platforms worldwide.

Source: Nyou

In DailySam Tags pr, lifestyleblogger, music
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