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Three Takes on Tenderness

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Published: 06 Jan 2026 › Updated: 06 Jan 2026Three Takes on Tenderness

Three Takes on Tenderness

Greetings and salutations Hivers. Today let’s go into another Three Tune Tuesday post.

As always, thanks to ablazeHive account@ablaze for keeping this long-running series alive. It’s one of the best ways on Hive to stumble into music you might never have found otherwise.

Today’s set isn’t tied together by genre or era, but by mood. All three songs strip things down and let emotion do the heavy lifting, whether through restraint, reinterpretation, or sheer melodic inevitability.

NEW SONG — haruka nakamura

Haruka Nakamura’s music often feels like it’s hovering just above silence. NEW SONG is a good example of that approach: gentle piano, open space, and a sense that the music is less performing than simply existing.

There’s a strong Japanese aesthetic here: restraint, patience, and trust in the listener. Nothing is rushed, nothing is over-explained. It’s the kind of track that rewards listening late at night, when the world is already quiet enough to meet it halfway.

I’m biased — I love everything these guys do.

Heroes — Postmodern Jukebox feat. Sara Niemietz

Heroes is one of those songs that feels untouchable. Bowie’s original is so bound up with its time, place, and emotional weight that most covers either collapse under it or try too hard to escape it. Some songs are just too Bowie to be covered, y’know.

But Postmodern Jukebox takes a different route: slow it down, soften the edges, and let the vulnerability come forward. Sara Niemietz’s vocal doesn’t try to out-Bowie Bowie. Instead, she reframes the song as something more intimate. The result is less anthem, more confession. It’s an incredible interpretation.

Kiss From A Rose — First To Eleven

Kiss From A Rose has always been an odd song: baroque, romantic, slightly mysterious, and unapologetically earnest. Strip away the lush production, though, and what you’re left with is a remarkably strong melody. One that assulted our ears nearly 24/7 around the time of the third Batman film. I mean seriously — it was almost as bad as the assult we faced when Bryan Adam’s Everything I Do I Do it for You was everywhere following the release of Robin Hood Prince of Theives.

First To Eleven’s acoustic version leans into that strength. Without the studio gloss, the song feels more exposed, almost fragile.

So, which one stayed with you the longest?

Hi there! David is an American teacher and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku. He blogs here and at laspina.org. Write him on Bluesky.

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David is an Italian-American expat lost in Japan. A photographer, father, lover of haiku, and eater of natto. Here, there, and everywhere.

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