
After Dark introduces Flyover with a tender, dusky intimacy, widening the album’s emotional landscape from the very first notes. Chris Rawlins leans into spacious folk arrangements and soft electric textures, letting his vocals drift with the quiet ache of someone tracing memories in half-light. The songwriting is rich in imagery, evoking the Midwest’s nocturnal vastness — cornfields dissolving into shadow, small towns glowing faintly at the edges. After Dark captures the dislocation, longing and subtle beauty that define Flyover’s world, offering a moving reflection on place, aging and the strange, lingering weather systems of adulthood.
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