mikah Homesick trilogy explores inner homecoming
Global pop artist mikah closes his Homesick trilogy with two new tracks that turn his search for home into a personal reflection. The Japanese American singer, who grew up moving across continents, uses Escape, In Between, and Dream to examine how home shifts as you grow. The trilogy blends acoustic notes, soft pop, and emotion. You get a clear view of how he processes distance, ambition, and identity.

Escape set the tone with a story about leaving his birthplace. The track shows the pull between chasing a dream and keeping family ties. Its simple production keeps your focus on his voice and the weight of the moment. You hear the conflict. You hear the fear and excitement in equal measure.
In Between widens the story. The track talks about restlessness and the urge to move again. You hear acoustic and country elements that show a new direction for mikah. The line “it is just me and my suitcase” explains the feeling clearly. You sense someone who stands between two worlds. You hear the tension between the comfort of routine and the promise of something new.
Dream closes the trilogy. It is brighter. It is more pop focused. It brings the emotional resolution. The track shows that home is not always a place. Sometimes home is a space inside you that grows as you grow. Mikah says a perfect future may not exist in reality. He says that is why we see it in our dreams. The track captures that acceptance without losing warmth.
The Dream music video strengthens this theme. Shot in Tokyo by a French creative team, the film shows mikah moving through Shibuya Crossing, trains, and taxis alone. You see moments of calm and moments of uncertainty. You see someone slowly finding clarity. The shots mirror the quiet shift happening inside him. Like Escape, the film works as both a continuation and a complete cinematic piece.
Homesick ties the three chapters into one idea. You chase places, you leave places, and you return to yourself. The trilogy shows that home can be a feeling and not a destination.
