Tey De Gennaro weaves history and heart into ‘Lovely Seasons of Love’

Tey De Gennaro’s latest single, ‘Lovely Seasons of Love’, arrives like a letter pressed between the pages of a diary- ornate, and full of quiet revelations. It’s indie pop but carries the weight of something older and more sacred- like a hymn dressed in velvet.

The Nashville-based artist leans into their flair for storytelling with this release, pairing poetic imagery with sweeping orchestral flourishes that nod to both the grandeur of Queen and the soul-searching depth of Hozier. Horns rise like cathedral bells behind tender, reflective vocals, and strings weave in and out like flickers of memory. It’s a love song, but not the kind that flirts on the surface- it’s the kind that remembers, that aches, that chooses connection over and over again in a world always pulling us apart.

What sets Tey apart is their ability to blend musical experimentation with a strong literary sensibility. Their songwriting feels both spontaneous and considered, as if each track is born fully formed and then gently refined. ‘Lovely Seasons of Love’ bears that signature- the feeling of something urgent made elegant.

There’s also a sense of purpose here that runs deeper than romance. Tey, who has used their platform to speak on issues like LGBTQ+ rights and education reform, infuses their music with the belief that art can be both beautiful and useful- that music can hold space for joy, grief, and radical empathy all at once.

With ‘Lovely Seasons of Love’, Tey De Gennaro offers a song that feels like a companion- faithful, gentle, and quietly profound. It’s music that makes room for your own memories. And in doing so, it reminds us why we return to art in the first place: to feel seen, to feel held, to feel something real.