“Fall In Luv (ReEdit)” by Zodic is a preserved emotional artefact, a time capsule of first love, first music, and first belief in self-expression. Born Roleph in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and shaped by a childhood defined by difference — culturally, socially, and emotionally — Zodic brings an authenticity to this track that can’t be manufactured. Growing up as the only member of his family not born in Haiti, he learned early what it felt like to be misunderstood, judged, and internally pressured to fit into expectations that didn’t feel like his own. That sense of otherness, paired with isolation and introspection, pushed him toward two safe havens: television and music. “Fall In Luv (ReEdit)” carries the emotional fingerprint of that journey — not polished perfection, but raw sincerity, vulnerability, and honesty that feels deeply human.
The story behind the track gives it an emotional gravity that elevates it beyond a typical love song. Written in 2017 for Zodic’s first girlfriend, the song was never meant to be a commercial product — it was a personal expression, a private confession turned into melody. Two years later, fate stepped in at a casino job in Washington State, where he met producer Brecht Lauren. What followed is the kind of origin story artists dream about: a spontaneous studio session in Brecht’s home studio, two hours of creativity, and the birth of Zodic’s very first recorded song. The moment he played it for his girlfriend in the car — and saw her reaction — cemented music as more than just an interest. It became identity, purpose, and possibility. That emotional origin still lives inside the song, even after years of remixes, revisions, and technical upgrades.
Sonically, the ReEdit version reflects maturity without losing innocence. The updated mix by Tyler Bugara and mastering by David Mason give the track clarity, warmth, and modern polish, but the emotional core remains untouched. There’s a softness to the vocal delivery that feels unforced, almost conversational — as if the listener is overhearing a personal confession rather than a performance. The production doesn’t overwhelm the emotion, but supports it, creating a space where vulnerability can exist without distraction. This balance between clean production and emotional rawness is what gives “Fall In Luv (ReEdit)” its resonance. It feels intimate without being fragile, romantic without being naïve, nostalgic without being stuck in the past.
What truly makes the track powerful, however, is its emotional universality. Even without knowing the story, listeners feel the sincerity immediately. There’s a purity in the way love is expressed — not dramatic, not theatrical, not exaggerated — just real. It reflects that rare stage of life where love feels limitless, where possibility feels endless, and where happiness feels uncomplicated. Zodic doesn’t try to intellectualise romance, but simply feels it, and that honesty becomes the song’s strongest asset. That’s why people resonate with it so naturally — it doesn’t perform love, it remembers it. It captures a moment when life felt simple, full, and emotionally safe, and translates that feeling into sound.

Releasing “Fall In Luv (ReEdit)” during Valentine’s Week 2026 feels not just strategic, but symbolic. This is a love song for memory, for beginnings, for first belief, and for the courage to create. Recorded originally in Cheney, Washington, during Zodic’s college years and later refined in Toronto, the track now carries geographical, emotional, and artistic history in its DNA. It stands as a reminder that sometimes the most powerful music isn’t born in major studios or big budgets, but in moments of sincerity, risk, and emotional truth. “Fall In Luv (ReEdit)” is the foundation of Zodic’s identity as an artist, and a reminder that real love, when captured honestly, never loses its power to move people.
For more information, follow Zodic:
WEBSITE – FACEBOOK – YOUTUBE – SPOTIFY – SOUNDCLOUD – INSTAGRAM
