
Every so often, a song comes along that feels less like a performance and more like someone opening their diary and letting you read the pages aloud. That’s exactly what ReeToxA accomplishes with Avocet Court, a track as tender as it is unflinching. Named after a street in Carrum Downs, Victoria—where the artist’s memories of conflict at home and school still linger—the song recalls the weight of adolescence and bottles it into a soundscape that feels deeply personal and universally relatable. The gentle piano, ghostlike synths, and almost hesitant vocal delivery make the track feel like it’s being sung to the listener in confidence, late at night, when the walls are thin and the heart is raw.
Lyrically, Avocet Court is drenched in the struggle between identity and environment, the desire to escape versus the fear of stepping into the unknown. Lines like “Won’t someone save me, sneak me out tonight?” capture a plea for liberation from a cycle of noise, grief, and routine—home life echoing the same fights, school life offering little refuge. Yet, there’s also a layer of social commentary: “You’re a boy, not allowed to tear or fear” reveals the suffocating expectations of masculinity, the demand to suppress vulnerability in the face of pain. It’s here that ReeToxA’s writing cuts deepest—not just confessing to personal struggle, but calling out the cultural silencing of emotion that traps so many in silence.
What makes these lyrics powerful is the way they pair yearning with resignation. The chorus, with its repeated “Say you love me”, is less a demand and more a whispered hope, as though the narrator doesn’t really believe the words will be spoken or heard. It’s an expression of craving love while being conditioned not to expect it. When ReeToxA sings of “the road calling,” the metaphor is about physical escape and survival, finding a place where selfhood can exist outside the cages of expectation. This tension between staying and leaving, between silence and voice, makes the track resonate with anyone who has ever stared at their childhood street and thought, I can’t survive here forever.
Musically, the production mirrors the story perfectly. The soft, almost fragile piano lines set a tone of intimacy, while the swelling synths create a sense of space, like the vast horizon of a city waiting beyond the hometown borders. The vocals, layered but never over-processed, feel like they hover just above breaking, giving the impression of someone both holding back tears and channelling them into art. It’s not polished perfection, but deliberate vulnerability, the kind of performance that leaves you holding your breath. The restraint in the arrangement lets the words bleed through, and in that space, the listener can feel the weight of every line.
Ultimately, Avocet Court is a meditation on what it costs to stay. It’s about the push and pull between love and survival, between the roles we’re told to inhabit and the selves we’re aching to become. ReeToxA doesn’t shout, doesn’t rage; instead, they deliver a soft ache that lingers long after the track fades out. It’s a quiet revolution, a reminder that sometimes the most powerful protest is simply daring to speak the truth of your experience. In its vulnerability, Avocet Court becomes not just ReeToxA’s story, but a mirror for anyone who has ever dreamed of slipping away into something freer, brighter, and wholly their own.