
Danielle Hani feels like that genius friend who pretends she is “just messing around.” She studied film scoring, played with orchestras, and moved from Israel to L.A., collecting musical influences like Pokémon. Her music mixes soft nostalgia with cinematic drama and the sense that she has lived through things she does not want to explain yet. With her EP Making It Big, she cracks open her brain and lets us wander in.
Let’s discuss the tracks. The title track arrives with ambition. It opens smelling like fresh sweat, guitar cables, and hope. You feel the band hyping themselves up with a “we’re not famous yet but just wait” attitude. The hook is dangerously catchy, the type you sing in the shower with embarrassing confidence. The lyrics offer “delulu is the solulu” energy in a cute, earnest way.
Then we slide into “Noodle Night,” which is honestly unhinged. A song about being drafted into war but finding joy in noodles is peak human behavior. It represents survival through snacks. The silly melody makes you laugh so you do not cry. It feels like a group therapy session turned into a cooking show. The song is warm, chaotic, and surprisingly comforting.
“Homeland” enters like someone dimmed the lights and whispered, “Let’s get reflective.” Suddenly you are thinking about where you came from and why you never call your mom back. There is a subtle Middle Eastern shimmer under the pop/rock vibe where Danielle tucked a piece of her past. It hits quietly but deeply, like a memory tapping you on the shoulder.
Meanwhile “Confusion” fits its title. This track sounds like pacing around your room talking to yourself. It is emotionally messy in the honest way that admits not knowing what you are doing. You hear the questions and hesitation. The harmony does not walk in a straight line; it stumbles around like all of us on a Tuesday night. It is relatable and holds zero judgment.
But then “The Song Is Over” arrives. This ballad starts small like a secret then builds as the key keeps rising. There is no chorus, just long verses that feel like a goodbye message you should not send. Calliope singing to Maverick? That is emotional violence. The track is a soft heartbreak that slowly turns into a punch.
By the end, I stopped simply listening to music. I was following a sitcom, a diary, and a therapy session mixed into one. Danielle’s “world citizen with a piano” energy leaks into these songs beautifully. Making It Big feels human, messy, hopeful, and warm. It is like a whisper saying life is chaotic but here is something to hold onto. Grab your headphones and get lost in these tracks.
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