Glowie Ventures Towards Self-Love in 'Where I Belong' EP

image

Photo: Stella Asia Consonni

The Nordic countries - Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland - have a combined population that is only about the size of Texas'. However, these chilly nations have a storied history of being a hotbed of popular music stardom. From super-producer/songwriter Max Martin to pop anomaly Bjà¶rk, this modest cultural region continues to churn out the best of the best, and it seems that next in this long line of hitmakers is Glowie. The 21-year-old Icelandic singer released her breakout EP Where I Belong on June 14, and with it, introduced her distinct twist to the Nordic pop formula.

For a project containing only five songs and three short interludes, Where I Belong pens an intricate map through the peaks and valleys of self-empowerment. The title track opens the project, its slinky guitars and torpid electronic drums forming the terra firma for Glowie's haunting vocal. In "Where I Belong," the singer recounts the strange elixir of fear and excitement that accompanies newfound independence, chanting, "All on my own, right where I belong / Nobody's home, now my love is gone."

Body positivity plays a large role in Glowie's music. The two singles that the artist dropped in the lead-up to her debut EP, "Cruel" and "Body," both address different aspects of this issue.

"Cruel" recounts Glowie's experiences facing judgment in high school for being too skinny. The singer breathes lyrics that sound as though she's reading from her journal over velvety synth pads and underplayed percussion, addressing the feelings of shame and uncertainty that she felt surrounding her appearance during adolescence. However, if "Cruel" depicts the struggle of dealing with body image, "Body" depicts the triumph. The bass-driven banger is an empowerment anthem directed at Glowie herself; in the music video, dancers hand-picked by the Icelander for their diverse range of body types groove across a tennis court while the singer chants, "That's a fuckin' body."

All in all, Where I Belong is a succinct but complex work of musical cartography that illustrates the vast topography of expectations we place upon ourselves. Follow Glowie's journey in Where I Belong here:

Related Articles

Claire Rosinkranz Reintroduces Herself On Flowery And Flawless Sophomore LP 'My Lover'

Claire Rosinkranz Reintroduces Herself On Flowery And Flawless Sophomore LP 'My Lover'

February 16, 2026 Claire Rosinkranz has always had a knack for bottling lightning, with fizzy, sugar-rush hooks that feel like they were crafted for maximum replay value. But on her sophomore album My Lover, she sharpens that instinct into something more dimensional.
Author: Alessandra Rincon
pop
Tiffany Stringer Turns Heartbreak Into a Breakout Hit in Major Label Debut "Bullet"

Tiffany Stringer Turns Heartbreak Into a Breakout Hit in Major Label Debut "Bullet"

February 13, 2026 “‘Bullet’ is the pop country SMASH I wrote after finding out my cheating ex got married.”
Author: Alessandra Rincon
pop
EMELINE Confronts Her Past in Dark-Pop Single, “Dance With My Demons”

EMELINE Confronts Her Past in Dark-Pop Single, “Dance With My Demons”

February 13, 2026 EMELINE isn’t just acknowledging her demons, she’s inviting them to the dance floor.
Author: Hillary Safadi
pop