In Your Dreams M4a Page
I downloaded the M4A from a private Bandcamp link the artist posted to their story—deleted after 24 hours. No remaster. No “optimized for Spotify.” Just the raw export from Logic Pro, saved as an M4A, untouched.
That version has . The verses sit at a quiet -23 LUFS. The chorus swells to -9, then cuts back so abruptly you check your headphones. It’s not a mistake. It’s insomnia rendered as audio. in your dreams m4a
In Your Dreams (M4A): When a Song Feels Like a Half-Remembered Thought I downloaded the M4A from a private Bandcamp
There’s a specific kind of heartbreak that doesn’t scream. It lingers. It lives in the spaces between sleep and consciousness, in the static of a voicemail you’ll never delete, in the quiet hiss of an old audio file you keep returning to at 2:17 AM. That version has
The M4A format (typically encoded with ALAC or a high-bitrate AAC) preserves the sub-bass flutter that happens at 0:47—the exact moment the narrator admits, “I don’t even miss you, I miss who I was when you were looking.”
“in your dreams” is the latter. And in M4A, it doesn’t just dissolve. It lingers. The way a name you haven’t said in years suddenly tastes like salt. The artist has since removed the track from all platforms. If you find the M4A in a Discord archive or an old DM—save it. Some dreams are worth keeping.
In a world where every song is compressed to death for playlist placement, “in your dreams” in M4A feels radical. Vulnerable. Like someone left a door open and you’re not supposed to be listening.