Sunrise in Jupiter deliver their soaring new single ‘Take Me Home’
When it comes to closing tracks, few dare to aim as high as Sunrise in Jupiter does with ‘Take Me Home’. The final breath of ‘Mission to Mars Vol. 1’ spirals through space, longing, and a need to be known by something, someone, anything.
Built like a slow-motion re-entry from the edge of the galaxy, this track drapes its emotion in echo-laden guitars, swelling atmospherics, and vocals that tremble with both clarity and collapse. But what makes ‘Take Me Home’ so quietly devastating is its refusal to over-explain. Instead of offering answers, it holds space for the question. It’s the sonic equivalent of staring out a window at night and hoping the lights you see in the distance still remember your name.
The track draws emotional weight from its restraint. No overly-polished theatrics. Just the tension between hope and doubt, distance and desire. Echoes of bands like Radiohead (A Moon Shaped Pool-era), the cinematic ache of 30 Seconds to Mars at their most grounded, and the spiritual scale of Black Holes and Revelations-era Muse all feel present, but filtered through Sunrise in Jupiter’s own lens of quiet apocalypse.
Lyrically, ‘Take Me Home’ sits at the edge of despair, whispering into the void, hoping the void whispers back. You can feel the sting of absence in every chord, every breath, every pause. Sunrise in Jupiter have created something that demands to be heard. A transmission from deep space and deeper emotion. If this is the curtain call for volume one, it leaves you suspended waiting, watching, wondering what could possibly come next.