Golden Frequency: How One Celebrates Life?
- Drea Smith

- Feb 27
- 2 min read
Updated: Mar 2

In His Words: Written by Elijah Sol
With my second release, Golden Frequency, I wanted to explore something different from my first project. The earlier work focused on stillness, listening, and the recognition of presence. It lived in the space of observation and the quiet awareness beneath experience.
This release moves in another direction. It steps into participation.
Golden Frequency is rooted in the idea that awareness does not separate us from life. It brings us closer to it. When we become more conscious, we do not step outside the human experience. Instead, we begin to notice it more fully. We hear the rhythms in conversation. We feel the warmth of connection. We recognize the subtle shifts of mood and the simple joy of being alive.
The music on this release reflects that shift. It carries more movement, more warmth, and a greater openness to the feeling of living in real time. Rather than defining celebration as something dramatic or external, the project explores a quieter understanding of what it means to celebrate life.
Celebration, in this sense, is not about spectacle or performance. It is about participation. It is the willingness to be present in ordinary moments without needing them to prove anything. It is laughter that arrives naturally, rest that comes without guilt, and connection that does not require explanation.
There is often a misconception that awareness makes life distant or abstract. My experience has been the opposite. Awareness draws attention to the texture of living and the details that usually go unnoticed. It deepens engagement rather than reducing it.
Golden Frequency is shaped by that perspective. The music is not meant to convince the listener of anything. Instead, it creates space for reflection and feeling. It invites the listener into a relationship with their own experience of being here.
In that sense, the release is less about delivering a message and more about offering an environment. It explores what happens when consciousness stops observing life from the outside and begins to move with it from within.
If the first project was about recognizing presence, this one is about living from it. It reflects the idea that celebration is not reserved for milestones or achievements. It becomes possible whenever we allow ourselves to participate fully in the moment we are already in.
Golden Frequency is an invitation to that participation and a reminder that life does not need to be perfected before it can be appreciated. It only needs to be lived.
— Elijah Sol
NOW STREAMING ON SPOTIFY

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