Skip to content

Chorus Chronicles

Where every chorus tells a story and every story finds its sound

  • HOME
  • ALL REVIEWS
  • EPs & ALBUMS
  • WEEKLY SPINS
  • ORGASM PLAYLIST
  • GIGS AND GATHERINGS
  • NEWS
  • LIFESTYLE
Chorus Chronicles
  • Home
  • ALL REVIEWS
  • Jeff Vidov’s “New York I’m Coming to You – Radio Edit” Is a Grand, Orchestral Love Letter to Second Chances

Jeff Vidov’s “New York I’m Coming to You – Radio Edit” Is a Grand, Orchestral Love Letter to Second Chances

Chorus Chronicles 15 July 2025

Some songs feel like postcards. Jeff Vidov’s “New York I’m Coming to You – Radio Edit” is a cinematic return ticket, sealed with every memory and heartbeat that city ever gave him. With sweeping orchestral arrangements, a piano that practically breathes nostalgia, and an emotionally-charged vocal performance by UK singer Jon, Vidov crafts more than just a track—he delivers a full-blown anthem to dreams deferred and the magnetic pull of places that shaped us. This isn’t just about geography; it’s about the places inside us that never stop calling.

From the opening bars, the song swells with the kind of grandeur that only comes from lived experience. Vidov’s piano work anchors the piece like a heartbeat, steady and resolute beneath the rising tide of strings and percussion. It’s the kind of arrangement that wears its ambition proudly. But rather than becoming overwrought, it remains grounded in feeling. You hear it not just in the notes, but in the spaces between them—the longing, the excitement, the ache of memory pressing up against hope.

Lyrically, “New York I’m Coming to You” is a personal letter written in universal ink. There’s no need to have walked the halls of Sony Studios or shared elevator rides with icons to feel what Vidov is singing about. Everyone has a New York—a place that holds your younger self, full of fire and unfinished plans. The chorus lifts like a skyline at dusk, all promise and emotion, made to be shouted from car radios and open windows. Jon’s vocal delivery is soaring without being showy, landing every note like it matters, which it does.

The production is rich but controlled, a testament to Vidov’s deep roots in classical composition and pop accessibility. The addition of Argentinian rhythm duo Lucas Seoane (drums) and Antonio Druetta (bass) injects a lively pulse that keeps the track from tipping into sentimentality. There’s an undercurrent of motion, of travel, of racing toward something you’ve been circling for years. Mixed by David Fraelic in Vancouver, the track balances grandeur with intimacy—something few anthems manage to pull off.

In “New York I’m Coming to You,” Jeff Vidov gives us more than a career milestone—he gives us his heart, mapped in melodies. It’s about time, distance, promise, and the inner vow to return—not just to a city, but to the self we left behind. It’s brave, bombastic, and refreshingly sincere. For anyone who’s ever made a promise to their past and wondered if it was too late to keep it, this one’s for you.

Continue Reading

Previous: Wattmore’s “Romantic Side” Is a Middle Finger and a Love Song in One
Next: Mikhaelize’s “Sur ses chemins” Is a Sonic Pilgrimage into the Sublime

Related Stories

I, Captain – ‘Endless Miles’: A Rock Opera Rocket Ride Into the Sonic Unknown

I, Captain – ‘Endless Miles’: A Rock Opera Rocket Ride Into the Sonic Unknown

Steve Lieberman, The Gangsta Rabbi – ‘Hey There, Laura!’ A Molotov Cocktail of Emotion and Anarchy

Steve Lieberman, The Gangsta Rabbi – ‘Hey There, Laura!’ A Molotov Cocktail of Emotion and Anarchy

ReeToxA – ‘Pines Salad’

ReeToxA – ‘Pines Salad’

Copyright © 2016-2025 All Rights Reserved. | Music Reviews by Chorus Chronicles.