Producer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Sam George, the creative force behind Pick Up Goliath, returns with “Black Sugar”, the second single from his forthcoming conceptual EP Salt & Static, set for release on 24 April 2026.
Following the deeply personal impact of Hope is a Hell of a Drug, George continues to explore the emotional and psychological terrain that defines Salt & Static. The six-track EP is a conceptual project centered on men’s mental health, examining the collision between body and mind—where physical strain (“salt”) meets the chaotic interference of intrusive thoughts and emotional unrest (“static”).
A Strong Foundation
The first single was met with a powerful critical response, praised for both its emotional weight and compositional depth.
Nicole Mendes of The Other Side Reviews described it as “a tempestuous storm… bound by intricate invisible structures,” while Michael Jamo of Song Web noted, “He doesn’t romanticise suffering… he shapes it with rare clarity.”
Other outlets echoed similar sentiments. ExtravaFrench highlighted its intensity, writing, “It doesn’t lift you, it pulls you under, crushes you, then rebuilds you,” while FalcoDice observed, “It feels personal, a bit messy, and very real—and that’s exactly what makes it stick.”
“Black Sugar” Explores the Pull of Addiction
With “Black Sugar,” George shifts focus from the cyclical tension between hope and despair into darker, more insidious territory: addiction.
Through stark personal reflection and layered metaphor, the track explores the seductive pull of destructive behaviours and substances. It captures the uneasy awareness of harm alongside the inability to let go—where something toxic becomes a source of comfort, routine, and dependency.
At its core, the song navigates the fragile boundary between control and surrender, revealing how self-destructive patterns can embed themselves deeply within everyday life.
Expanding the Identity
Musically, Black Sugar builds on the sonic foundation established in the first single, blending:
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- Modern metalcore aggression
- Cinematic atmospheres
- Subtle synthwave textures
The result is a dynamic and immersive soundscape. Melodic elements draw listeners in, only to expose an undercurrent of instability—perfectly mirroring the track’s thematic tension.
An Honest Creative Process
Speaking about the track, George explains:
“These songs come from experiences that were difficult to revisit, and in some cases difficult to admit out loud. Black Sugar is about recognising something as destructive—even toxic—but still feeling pulled towards it. There’s a strange comfort in the things that hurt us, and that contradiction is something I wanted to explore honestly.”