Lina Nadine J May 2026
At 26, the Berlin-based (by way of Jakarta and London) multi-hyphenate—singer, producer, poet, and now, creative director of her own micro-label, Hollow Bones —refuses to be boxed in. Not out of rebellion, but out of necessity. “I don’t feel things in genres,” she says, sipping cold matcha in a sun-flecked Neukölln studio. “I feel them in textures. Velvet. Rust. The fog on a window right before you wipe it away.”
is available for pre-save now. But maybe, just maybe, Lina would prefer you close your eyes and wait for the hiss. [End of Feature] lina nadine j
Her breakout came not from a radio single, but from a 47-second video. During the 2023 lockdowns in Berlin, she uploaded a clip of herself humming over a looped cello and a rain sample. Titled “for the ones who stay silent at parties,” it amassed 4 million views in a week. Commenters didn’t just hear her—they felt recognized. At 26, the Berlin-based (by way of Jakarta
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“I didn’t write that song for virality,” she says. “I wrote it because I was sitting on my bathroom floor, and I realized I hadn’t spoken out loud in six hours.” Producer Jonah Kessler (who worked on her upcoming single “Rust” ) describes working with Lina as “architectural demolition.” He explains: “She builds these immaculate, skeletal structures—piano, a single synth pad, a field recording of a train. Then, right before the take, she asks me to unplug something. To let the air in. We don’t fix the hiss. We name the hiss.” “I feel them in textures
“I don’t want to perform for you,” she says, standing up to leave. The studio light catches the side of her face. “I want to build a nest, and let you rest there for a while.”