Lisha Sebastian meets her second album at the exact point where the body decides first. The artist who chronicled her journey through darkness and light in Sworn to Secrecy at twenty now steps into Learning to Love with songs that place love and relationships in the foreground, the modern pop pulse carrying admissions that arrive before the mind can catch them.
Burning Sheets
“Burning Sheets” is the prayer that already knows it will end in play the second it begins. The song drops the narrator to her knees from the opening line, tracing the slick figure through breath laced with liquor while the chorus lines up the dream that will light up the sky anyway, bodies aligning without a single apology. The track drifts outward still inside the heat, the sheets burning and the lights still moving as it hands the same question to the rest of the album, leaving the listener mid-game with the flame already lit and the next move waiting wherever the music stops.
Dancing on the Dance Floor
“Dancing on the Dance Floor” is the glance across the room that rewrites the entire night in one boom. The song locks eyes with golden skin and brown eyes, lets the heart pound and the head spin, then turns the immediate “next mistake” into the only plan worth following, bodies pulled tighter while memories erase themselves on the spot. The song steps off still mid-dance, the hands around the waist and the truth just found pulling forward into the album’s current, as if the floor has only begun to move and the sky is waiting to see how far the two of them will take it before the lights cut out.






