Kenzie Just Dropped an EP for Anyone Stuck Between Who They Were and Who They’re Becoming
- Jennifer Gurton

- 2 hours ago
- 2 min read

Kenzie just dropped an EP that feels like scrolling through your own thoughts at 2AM and realizing you don’t actually have control over any of it.
notes from the in between doesn’t play by traditional pop rules. There’s no clear arc, no emotional bow tied at the end. Instead, it sits in that uncomfortable space between who you were and who you’re becoming, and refuses to rush through it.
Let’s call it out. Most pop projects still hand-feed listeners a narrative. Heartbreak, healing, glow-up, done. This EP rejects that completely. It leans into confusion, unresolved tension, and the kind of emotional limbo that actually defines your early twenties.
Sonically, the project keeps things fluid. Minimal, moody production dominates, but there are flashes of energy that cut through just enough to keep it from sinking into monotony. It never feels overproduced. If anything, it feels intentionally exposed, like the music is leaving space for the emotion to sit front and center.
Tracks like “mutual destruction” and “kleptomaniac” lean into moral grey zones, where attraction and self-sabotage blur together in ways that feel a little too real. Meanwhile, “sophie” anchors the project emotionally, grounding it in personal reflection without over-explaining itself. And then “where do we go” zooms out into something bigger, questioning what any of this even means when nothing feels permanent.
Vocally, Kenzie keeps it raw. There’s no over-polished perfection here. Her delivery feels fragile in a way that actually works, like she’s still figuring things out mid-song instead of presenting a finished version of herself.
What makes this EP land is its refusal to fake growth. It doesn’t pretend to have answers. It doesn’t rush toward closure. It just exists in the mess.


