Nemuri Radio

HAIQEEM and Vyza Nemuri

A private line gone public. In this lo-fi confessional, bedroom-pop enigma Vyza Nemuri and genre-defiant rocker HAIQEEM untangle the wreckage of memory, music, and the mistakes that made them. What was once whispered now plays out in stereo.

  1. 10/10/2025

    After the storm, it's not your hair- it's YOU!

    The Season 2 finale of Nemuri Radio brings emotion, laughter, and legacy to the mic as Vyza and HAIQEEM reflect on the song that inspired a quiet revolution in both their hearts: Pamela Pantea’s “It’s Not Your Hair, It’s You.” With its slow-burning truth and sly country-jazz undertones that are pure rockabilly, the track becomes the anchor for one of the season’s most intimate conversations.   Vyza calls Pamela’s song “my inspiration” — a rare, unguarded admission from someone usually allergic to sentimentality. She doesn’t go into how her response song “After the Storm” came to be, and she doesn’t have to. Her tone says it all: reverent, empowered, and still carrying the echo of something hard-earned.   HAIQEEM tries to steer the conversation, but the episode is dotted with bloopers — background sips, unscripted laughs, and him muttering “I’ll fix it in the mix” every time he stumbles, though by the end, nothing’s been fixed. Vyza teases him about it. He lets it ride. It’s messy and real — just like the songs.   They describe “After the Storm” as a jazz-tinged rockabilly torch ballad — one part lipstick, one part lightning. If Pamela’s version was the sermon, Vyza’s is the cigarette outside the church. Together, the tracks paint a picture of two women in conversation across generations, genres, and genres of grief.   🎧 The episode closes with both full tracks: – “It’s Not Your Hair, It’s You” by Pamela Pantea – smoky, sharp, unforgettable. – “After the Storm” by Vyza – hip-swinging defiance wrapped in haunted glamour.

    8 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

A private line gone public. In this lo-fi confessional, bedroom-pop enigma Vyza Nemuri and genre-defiant rocker HAIQEEM untangle the wreckage of memory, music, and the mistakes that made them. What was once whispered now plays out in stereo.