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Luc Letourneau Finds Meaning in Uncertainty in ‘Next Life / One More Day Like This’

  • Apr 20
  • 1 min read


Luc Letourneau’s debut thrives in the in-between spaces—the moments where nothing is fully resolved and everything still feels possible. Next Life / One More Day Like This is less about arrival and more about the act of searching.


The production reflects that mindset. Recorded in Boulder, the album feels grounded in place but not confined by it. The sound is open, airy, occasionally rugged—like it was captured as it happened rather than constructed afterward.


Letourneau’s songwriting leans heavily into narrative, but it avoids neat conclusions. “Awesomest Man” feels like an argument without a winner, while “Next Life” drifts through existential questions without trying to resolve them. That openness is refreshing.

Influences from folk and indie traditions are clear, but they never feel derivative. Instead, Letourneau absorbs those textures and reshapes them into something distinctly his own—something that prioritizes feeling over form.


By the end of the album, you don’t feel like you’ve been told a story—you feel like you’ve lived alongside one. And that’s a rare achievement, especially for a debut.


"Luc Letourneau’s debut album is a rare combination of raw honesty and intellectual friction,” says Danielle Holian, Decent Music PR. “He captures the tension of growing up in a world that often moves on autopilot. Next Life / One More Day Like This isn’t just an album; it’s a defiant stance against digital distraction and a pursuit of wisdom in a cynical world. Luc’s voice is one we expect to hear shaping the scene for years to come."


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