Home Arts & Leisure A homecoming for The Ransom Collective

A homecoming for The Ransom Collective

OPM BAND The Ransom Collective has dropped a new track, 鈥淭ongue Tied,鈥 which is their first official single in four years. To mark its release, the band held a virtual press conference where they detailed the song鈥檚 evolution 鈥 from being first written in 2020 to its completion across multiple cities and studios.

The song infuses bossa nova with indie pop and aims to be 鈥渁 snapshot of who they were and a reminder of what still connects them.鈥 The Ransom Collective was formed in 2013 and went on to define indie pop OPM in the 2010s.

For band members Kian Ransom, Jermaine Choa Peck, Muriel Gonzales, and Lily Gonzales, the song was a product of jamming together and an encapsulation of the butterflies of forming a new love.

鈥淲e weren鈥檛 sure where the song was gonna go. It was kind of a bossa nova style, but we found a way to pull it into our indie folk sound,鈥 said Mr. Ransom, the band鈥檚 lead guitarist and vocalist. 鈥淚 hope it will bring people back to some memory. The song plays out like a story, of people following a spark of curiosity, intrigue, or romance.鈥

He added that 鈥淭ongue Tied鈥 was shelved for a long time when the band slowed down, with some members turning to other priorities and others moving out of town during the pandemic. This makes the song feel 鈥渓ess like a comeback, but more like coming home.鈥

For percussionist and vocalist Ms. Choa Peck, it was natural for the band members to pick production back up remotely, record their parts in different studios and spaces, and finally finish the track in Manila in late 2025.

鈥淎s a band, we allowed ourselves to experience life outside of the fulltime music that we were doing for how many years. Some of us got married, some of us moved to another country, some of us pursued solo careers. We were supportive of each other鈥檚 growth in life,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭he beauty of releasing this is that it鈥檚 like going back to those times, and seeing how we are now in this part of our lives after everything we鈥檝e been through.鈥

Built on rich instrumentation, 鈥淭ongue Tied鈥 introduces new textures and approaches into the band鈥檚 signature indie-folk palette, from jazzy harmonies to bossa nova rhythms.

The older Ms. Gonzales, violinist Muriel, noted that they鈥檙e no longer too strategic about what they put out. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just going with the flow, whatever comes. If the younger generation picks it up, that鈥檚 cool, but in terms of genres, there鈥檚 so many different trends now. Our sound is very acoustic and organic, and we enjoy making the music that we like. It comes spontaneously when we write,鈥 she said.

The band detailed that the song could resonate with both long-time fans and new listeners as it balances their familiar sound with a contemporary edge. It can be described as 鈥渁n unreleased track of the Traces album, but jazzier, so it also feels like a standalone鈥 鈥 an unintentional result that emerged from their easygoing songwriting approach.

鈥淚 think our mindset has evolved in terms of having to be productive all the time,鈥 the younger Ms. Gonzales, keyboardist Lily, added, on how their creative process as a band has changed. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not really about productivity.鈥

On 鈥淭ongue Tied,鈥 both she and Ms. Choa Peck were able to unleash their creativity with the percussion and voicing of the outro (the closing section of a song, the opposite of an intro). Mr. Ransom revealed: 鈥淭he song changed so much because of the amount of time it took [to write]. We ended up swapping out the outro multiple times.鈥

鈥淭he outro was Lily just interacting with the music we already started together,鈥 he said, concluding that 鈥渢here鈥檚 something that just happens when we are all together.鈥

While they are under no pressure to churn out more music as a band, it is something they are all looking forward to doing naturally, they said.

The Ransom Collective鈥檚 鈥淭ongue Tied鈥 is out now on all digital music platforms worldwide. 鈥 Bront毛 H. Lacsamana