There’s a very specific kind of tired that comes from trying to fix everything at once. Not dramatic tired — practical, looping, quietly exhausting. Sunday seem to know that feeling well, and “Washing All the Pieces” sits right inside it, not to solve it, but to ease the grip.
“Washing All the Pieces” moves with restraint, and that choice is the whole point. The production doesn’t rush to impress; it gives itself space. Downtempo, chilled, and deliberately unflashy, the track feels like someone finally stepping back from the mess on the table and deciding it can wait until tomorrow.
The emotional honesty underneath the calm is pretty cool. As musicians, composers, and self-employed brains, we’re trained to troubleshoot constantly — software bugs, hardware issues, creative doubts, promotion anxiety, that sneaky voice asking why are you even doing this? This song doesn’t argue with that voice. It acknowledges it, then gently lowers the volume.
There’s a quiet confidence in how the track unfolds. The beats stay grounded, the synths drift rather than sparkle, and the arrangement resists big moments on purpose. That refusal feels generous. It tells you that pressure doesn’t have to be productive, that urgency isn’t always useful.

Sunday’s vocal timbre seals the deal. It’s sensual, simpático, and human — the kind of voice that doesn’t lecture, just sits with you while things feel unresolved. There’s also something interestingly temporal about the song: it feels antique and fresh at the same time, like an old idea rediscovered through modern tools. Honestly, that balance is something I want for my own music too.
About Sunday:
Based in Brisbane, Australia, Sunday is an electronic producer and songwriter whose work blends beats, dreamy synths, and floating vocals into something both euphoric and vulnerable. Inspired by artists like Peter Gabriel, Björk, John Talabot, and Nicolas Jaar, Sunday’s path has led to shows across Europe, Asia, and the Americas, including appearances at Coachella and Primavera. With millions of streams behind them and a debut album, “Kintsugi“, released in 2023, “Washing All the Pieces” marks a shift toward a more songwriting-focused, inward-facing chapter.
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