
Toronto’s Victoria Staff returns with “Sweet Blue Moon,” a reflective, romantic single that traces a relationship from its first spark through its unraveling, and finally into the quiet space of looking back. Rather than framing love as something purely good or bad, the track lingers in the in-between and honours the rare moments that mattered, even when everything else fell apart.
The name came late in the process. “This song didn’t have a title for a long time,” Staff explains. “It was just ‘that song without a name’ that my producer Will Crann and I were making.” While listening back, the phrase “Sweet Blue Moon” surfaced as a subtle twist on the familiar idiom. “This song isn’t just about rare moments,” she says. “It’s about rare moments you enjoyed, and being happy you have them to hold onto.” Structurally, the song mirrors the emotional arc it explores. “There really isn’t any part of this song that repeats, because it’s not about any one thing,” Staff notes. The track unfolds in three distinct choruses, each reflecting a different phase of the same relationship. The first is rooted in confidence and possibility, written with straightforward major chords. The second shifts into collapse, moving through relative minors that intentionally create tension and unease. By the final chorus, the song returns to major chords but with variations that introduce uncertainty, echoing the unresolved nature of memory and reflection.
Lyrically, “Sweet Blue Moon” captures the fleeting thoughts that surface when revisiting the past. “It’s the short train of thought that blows through when you think about your past,” Staff says. “You were with someone, it ended badly, but you hope they think about you and they think nice things.”