Em Paz
Filipe Ret
Filipe Ret's "Em Paz" is a confessional built on warm, slightly dusty production — piano samples looped with the grain left in, drums tuned low, bass notes that sustain rather than punch. Ret's voice carries the quality of someone dictating a letter to himself, introspective without being theatrical, the emotional temperature measured and even as he works through something genuinely difficult. The song circles the concept of peace as something hard-won and potentially temporary, the title functioning as aspiration rather than declaration of arrival. His bars move through personal history — relationships that burned, choices that cost more than anticipated, the labor of becoming someone whose interior matches their exterior performance. Ret occupies a particular lane in Brazilian rap, somewhere between the conscious tradition of São Paulo's rap circuit and the melodic introspection that defines contemporary trap, and "Em Paz" sits at that intersection with complete comfort. There is no apology for complexity here, no forced resolution. The production supports this refusal — it never builds to cathartic release, just continues its gentle circulation. This is music for late nights when the performance of wellness has been set aside and the actual accounting begins, best heard alone with whatever substance or silence the listener requires for honesty.
slow
2020s
warm, grainy, hushed
Brazil (São Paulo)
Hip-Hop, Trap. Brazilian Trap / Conscious Rap. Melancholic, Reflective. Begins in quiet introspection and sustains a measured, unresolved accounting of personal difficulty without reaching catharsis.. energy 3. slow. danceability 2. valence 3. vocals: confessional, measured, intimate, understated, letter-like. production: warm piano samples, low-tuned drums, sustained bass, dusty textures. texture: warm, grainy, hushed. acousticness 3. era: 2020s. Brazil (São Paulo). Late at night, alone, when the performance of being okay has been set aside and genuine self-reflection begins.