Ghosts in the Glow: Zarooni Finds Clarity in “Once”
- GRAHAM
- 5 days ago
- 2 min read
Updated: 4 days ago

Zarooni’s “Once” is a slow-burning ember of a track, soft at first, but smouldering with emotional heat. A dream-infused synth rock ballad steeped in nostalgia, it’s the kind of song that sneaks up on you, first lulling, then gutting. Through gauzy synths, reverb-drenched guitars, and echoing vocals, Zarooni crafts a soundscape cinematic in its melancholy. But beneath the shimmering textures lies a sharp emotional pivot: a relationship is examined not with longing, but with growing clarity.
Born and raised in Dubai, Zarooni’s music mirrors his city’s cultural convergence. Trained first as a guitarist, his musical identity is a collage of indie, rock, pop, and electronic threads stitched into something distinctly his own. “Once” feels like a culmination of these influences, and structure floats with ambient patience, but its message is razor-edged. There’s a calm restraint in the verses, a sense that every sound is measured, intentional, and revelatory.
The lyrical shift from “I was beautiful once” to “you were beautiful once” is the track’s emotional turning point. It’s a subtle yet powerful evolution, marking a reclaiming of self and the dissipation of illusion. This is not a song about romanticising what’s been lost but seeing it clearly for the first time. Zarooni doesn’t dramatise the pain; instead, he walks through it like a fog lifting at dawn, trading heartbreak for self-awareness.
Musically, the track is anchored by a pulsating synth line that acts like a heartbeat—steady, hypnotic, and slightly detached. Layers of ambient guitar swirl around it like memories you can’t quite shake. His voice floats above the mix like a ghost, close but untouchable. Zarooni isn’t screaming his pain, but letting it echo until it finds its shape.
With “Once,” Zarooni proves himself more than a genre-blending artist, but a master of emotional architecture. The track tells a story and feels like one, lived and processed in real time. In a musical landscape crowded with overproduction and forced catharsis, Zarooni’s restraint feels like rebellion. “Once” is a breakup song, but also a portrait of emotional survival, painted in synth and shadow.
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