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Reading: Dax Confronts His Demons on the Strikingly Honest “Man I Used To Be”
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Dax Confronts His Demons on the Strikingly Honest “Man I Used To Be”

Graham
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With “Man I Used To Be,” Dax opens a journal, tears out a page, and sings it into existence. Hailing from Wichita, Dax has carved a lane for himself through vulnerability and lyrical sharpness, often toeing the line between confession and catharsis. His latest release, dropped on August 1st, 2025, finds him fresh off a six-month sobriety milestone, using that clarity to mine truth from his past and channel it into art. The result is a gripping track that’s personal and universally resonant, a musical reckoning drenched in raw emotion.

The production, helmed by Nashville-based hitmaker Jimmy Robbins, mirrors the song’s emotional gravity. Built on a foundation of stark acoustic guitar and slow-burning percussion, the instrumentation refuses to overshadow the lyrics—instead, it breathes with them. Robbins crafts an atmosphere that allows Dax’s voice to stand centerstage, often quivering with weight but never losing control. This is not a song that hides behind studio polish; it embraces its scars, lets silence speak between verses, and trusts the listener to lean in.

What gives “Man I Used To Be” its staying power is Dax’s refusal to look away from his reflection. He raps and sings with a confessional tone, unpacking regret without glamorising it. Lines drip with honesty, addressing addiction, isolation, and the pursuit of identity in a world that often rewards masks over truth. “I had to find the light without a bottle in my hand,” he confesses, a line that anchors the entire track. Rather than play victim, he speaks as someone who’s done the work and continues to do it daily.

Recorded in Nashville, this track marks the first release Dax created entirely during a sustained period of sobriety—a promise he made to himself before putting out new music in 2025. That promise lends the song an added layer of significance. It’s a creative milestone and a spiritual checkpoint. You can feel the difference in his delivery—focused, intentional, and deeply connected to the material. There’s a quiet triumph in how he transforms personal struggle into collective strength, inviting listeners not just to relate but to reflect.

With his “Lonely Dirt Road Tour” on the horizon, Dax is positioning himself as a rapper, singer and storyteller for those navigating the messy middle of self-reinvention. “Man I Used To Be” is the kind of song that finds people in the dark and walks with them toward something brighter—not preaching, just relating. And in a music world cluttered with ego and illusion, that authenticity is not just refreshing, but vital.

For more information, follow Dax:
Spotify – YouTube – Soundcloud – Instagram

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