Odin St

Album: released as a single (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • Ryn Weaver was one of those bright-burning artists of the 2010s - glamorous, sharp-tongued, and impossible to ignore - until, quite suddenly, she disappeared. Back in 2014 her synth-pop firecracker "OctaHate" blew up in the kind of way that turns SoundCloud statistics into record deals. The following year, she released her debut album, The Fool, a whimsical, emotionally intelligent alt-pop statement that hit #30 on the Billboard 200 and launched a headline tour. And then... silence. No sophomore album. No more viral singles. Just an unexplained vanishing act from a woman who seemed like she was only just getting started.

    Weaver left her label, moved to a house in the Hollywood Hills on a street called Odin, and quietly slipped into what she later described as a period of hedonism, heartbreak, and self-repair.

    Exactly 10 years to the day after releasing The Fool, Ryn Weaver made her return with the introspective single "Odin St."
  • "Odin St" takes its name from the Hollywood Hills street she lived on following the release of her debut album. The song draws parallels between Weaver's search for wisdom and the Norse god Odin, known for sacrificing everything in pursuit of knowledge. She described this period as a time of hedonism and chaos, but also one of crucial personal growth. It was a dazzlingly chaotic lifestyle: holed up in a house she couldn't quite afford, tangled in a romance that devoured time like it was on an endless loop.

    "I didn't know the lore of Odin at the time," Weaver told Billboard, "but it was this safe haven, bunker, Grey Gardens situation." She hid there, letting the dust of industry burnout and personal chaos settle.

    Later learning that Odin is the Norse god of wisdom felt eerily appropriate. "It was also the inverse," she added. "I was partying, I was hiding, and I was with someone I shouldn't have been with. So it was kind of this house down the road from wisdom."
  • "Odin St" came together slowly. Weaver started drafting it years earlier, but the version she ultimately released began at 7:00 a.m. in a haze of creative insomnia with Constantine Anastasakis (a.k.a. Blonder), whose "very interesting dark guitar tone" helped define the track's brooding sound. She'd also worked earlier with producer-songwriter Active Child, but that version leaned too romantic. "Too joyful," she said.
  • The version that stuck was produced by Blonder and Benjamin Greenspan. It hits a delicate balance between grit and glow.

    The vocal key was chosen entirely by necessity: "It's 7:00 a.m., this is where I can sing this song." They tried lifting it later, only to find it turned the song into a jingle. "We're keeping it where it is," she insisted, "because it's dark, and it's gritty."

    The finished track is emotionally raw, filled with both longing and release. A gritty dark-pop anthem about stalling out in the middle of your life and trying to turn the wreckage into something meaningful.

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