DeepLush, a renowned electronic music producer and DJ, has been making waves in the industry with his unique blend of emotive and euphoric soundscapes. Recently, he has been focusing on a fascinating project, collaborating with two talented vocalists - Winter Jade and Teen Angel.
If you are lucky enough to procure a bottle of the hybrid, application is key. Do not spray and go. DeepLush - Winter Jade - Teen Angel
At first glance, the phrase “DeepLush - Winter Jade - Teen Angel” reads like a tracklist from a dream-pop band’s obscure EP, or perhaps a set of limited-edition fragrance notes. It is a triptych of contradictions, a collision of texture, temperature, mineral, and mortality. Yet, when held up to the light, these three fragments form a coherent emotional narrative about the volatile transition from adolescence into something colder, harder, and more enduring. They map the geography of a specific, aching nostalgia: the moment the fever of youth meets the chill of reality. DeepLush, a renowned electronic music producer and DJ,
“DeepLush - Winter Jade - Teen Angel” is therefore a funerary procession for the self. It begins in the swamp of adolescent sensation (DeepLush), moves through the glacial period of aesthetic self-preservation (Winter Jade), and ends in the cemetery of lost possibility (Teen Angel). It suggests that growing up is not a linear path to wisdom, but a process of petrification. We start as lush forests of feeling, we harden into precious stones to survive the winter, and finally, we mourn the messy, mortal teenager we had to kill to become this beautiful, cold, enduring thing. Do not spray and go
So, what happens when you layer together? The result is nothing short of a chemical ghost story.
Wearing feels like being the antagonist in a Korean drama—elegant, untouchable, and radiating a chill that makes others lean in closer to see if you are actually breathing. It is the scent of solitude and luxury.
We are tired of smelling like vanilla cupcakes. We want to smell like forbidden fruit—fruit picked from a tree growing in a cemetery in January.