WATERMARK, A New Album By Alexoom
10 tracks of acid trance, reggaeton-techno fusion, and nocturnal poetry. Out June 26. Pre-order June 19.
What Is Watermark?

Watermark is a mark you can’t erase. A trace. A signal left behind.
Alexoom’s new 10-track album bleeds neon and midnight. Built on analog acid basslines and punchy reggaeton-techno rhythms, Watermark is intimate in a way her previous work wasn’t. These are songs about persistence, about the marks we leave, the shadows we carry, the light we find when everything feels empty.
The album opens with a whispered plea (Blue by Heart) and spirals through nocturnal landscapes (Shadow Code, Sleepy Tune) before breaking into moments of transcendent beauty (Shoreline Drift, Rhythm Wide). It closes with laughter and a folktale (Tiddalick), a reminder that even in the darkest frequencies, joy finds a way in.
Watermark is Sophia Larsen at her rawest. No apologies. No compromise. Pure signal.
Track Listing with Descriptions

Track 1
Blue by Heart (Acid Trance Techno)
A whispered opening. A porch light that shines for you and me. The album begins with vulnerability, a simple plea wrapped in 128 BPM analog acid and 90s rave grit.

Track 2
Shadow Code (Reggaeton-Techno Hybrid)
They tried to bury you. You came back anyway. Shadow Code is about the marks you leave that can’t be erased, the tags that keep showing up no matter how hard they try to wipe them clean.

Track 3
Sleepy Tune (Reggaeton-Techno Hybrid)
Streetlights hum. Empty swing sets creak. This nocturnal meditation asks: where did you go? Will you come back? Haunting. Hypnotic.

Track 4
Rhythm Wide (Acid Trance Techno)
A moment of pure joy. Walking by your side with the sea so wide. Everything is so nice. Rhythm Wide is the album’s first exhale, a breath of summer before the darkness returns.

Track 5
Shoreline Drift (Acid Trance Techno)
Bare feet on sand. Wind in your hair. The sea pulling at your clothes. You don’t want to change. This is transcendence in its simplest form, a perfect moment made eternal through sound.

Track 6
Fractal Tides (Instrumental)
Spanish guitar meets analog acid. A purely instrumental interlude that drifts like water, like time, like the feeling of being caught between worlds.

Track 7
Paper Rain (Acid Trance Techno)
Hard years fold like paper in the rain. A tired soul learns to stand again. Paper Rain is resilience distilled into 3 minutes, poetic, raw, undeniably human.

Track 8
Golden Shade (Acid Trance Techno)
Give it shade. Give it time. Even in the heat, it can turn to gold. Short. Sweet. A mantra wrapped in hypnotic production.

Track 9
Liminal Waves (Instrumental)
Between states. Between worlds. A purely instrumental track that exists in the space between sleep and waking, between endings and beginnings.

Track 10
Tiddalick (Acid Trance Techno)
The album closes with a laugh. An old folktale set to acid trance, Tiddalick the frog who swallowed the world’s water. Even in drought, even in silence, laughter can save us all. A final reminder: joy is an act of resistance.
The Sounds of Watermark
Production Notes:
Analog acid basslines. Punchy reggaeton drums. Syncopated timbales and handclap accents. Detuned saw leads and filtered pad stabs. Four-on-the-floor kicks and half-volume drops. Raw mixdown. 90s rave grit. Short plate reverb. Sidechain compression. Edgy euphoria.
Watermark strips back the polish of previous releases and leans into the raw, the nocturnal, the honest. These are tracks meant to move dance floors at 3 AM when everyone’s still standing because they have to. Because the music won’t let them stop.


Pre-Order & Release
Pre-Order Opens: June 19, 2026
[Apple Music] [Amazon]
Official Release: June 26, 2026
Available on all major streaming platforms:
[Spotify] [Apple Music] [YouTube Music] [Boomplay]
The Themes of Watermark
Watermark explores three interconnected ideas:
Persistence, The marks we leave can’t be erased. In Shadow Code, she sings: “If they wipe my face from the file / I’ll come back in a different file.” Nothing you do disappears. Everything leaves a trace.
Nocturnal Beauty, The album leans into the aesthetic of late night, neon, rain-slicked streets, empty parks. But within that darkness lives tenderness, vulnerability, moments of genuine connection.
Resilience Through Joy, The album doesn’t shy away from hard truths (Paper Rain, Sleepy Tune), but it also celebrates joy as radical act. Rhythm Wide and Tiddalick remind us that laughter and lightness are forms of resistance.


