Featured Tune: "The Eulogy" from My Turning Point
reviews
Grief in Real Time — “The Eulogy” Is Raw, Real, and Relentless
There’s no pretending in The Eulogy, the latest release from My Turning Point (aka Leon Evans). This isn’t a track that was crafted over months in a studio, chasing perfection. It’s a late-night burst of grief—written half-asleep at 3 a.m., with the word “trauma bond” ringing in Evans’ head. And you can feel it. Every line aches.
Evans, a self-produced one-man band from Aberdare, has lived through the kind of emotional terrain most people spend lifetimes avoiding. And in The Eulogy, he invites us in—not to spectate, but to feel the weight of losing a friendship that shaped him. There’s no sugar-coating, no poetic veil. Just plain spoken heartbreak. “This song only exists because I couldn’t keep it inside anymore” feels like the unspoken subtitle.
Musically, it's stripped back—guitar and voice, raw and unpolished in the best way. There’s no flashy production here, just the kind of intimacy that hits harder because it’s bare. The quiver in his voice, the quiet swell of emotion in the melody—it’s as though we’re sitting beside him at 3 a.m., hearing it all unfold in real time.
The Eulogy isn’t just a song—it’s an emotional confession dressed in chords. Honest, unflinching, and unforgettable.