My parents are die-hard Elvis fans, the kind who still have old Sun Records 45s tucked away in a cabinet and think the world peaked in 1968, so I’ve heard “Can’t Help Falling in Love” more times than I’ve had hot dinners. When I saw Aaria’s Feel the Light sitting on my desk, I expected another precocious kid doing karaoke-style renditions of the classics to satisfy a talent show judge. I figured I’d give it a courtesy spin and move on to the next stack of demos. But about a minute into the first track, I realized I wasn’t listening to a gimmick. I was listening to a real musician. By the time she got to the King’s classic, she was claiming it.
It is out of the ordinary to see an 11-year-old release a full-length studio album, and unusual for that record to be split right down the middle with original compositions. Usually, at that age, you’re still figuring out how to play a C-major scale without looking at your hands, but Aaria seems to have bypassed the awkward stage entirely. Splitting her time between the quiet suburbs of Moorestown, the industry grind of Los Angeles, and the artistic pulse of Montreal, she has absorbed a lot of disparate influences. You can hear it in the production coming out of Planet Studios. There is a certain cosmopolitan polish to the sound that shouldn’t make sense for someone who hasn’t even hit middle school yet.
The core of this project is Aaria’s relationship with the piano. She’s a champion-level thinker, literally, given her chess background, and that strategic, disciplined approach translates to her composition. The originals on Feel the Light aren’t just “cute” songs. They are structured, melodic, and occasionally surprisingly dense. Her band, Wildlife, which she formed back in 2021, provides a sturdy foundation of percussion and electronic textures. They were named Wildlife for a reason, and that theme of sustainability and natural beauty runs through the entire tracklist like a green thread.
Take a track like “Ponies in Denver,” which has already started to rack up some serious numbers on YouTube. It’s about holding onto your identity and the innocence of childhood dreams even as the world tries to complicate things. It has a fierce individuality to it. You get the sense that Aaria is singing about a very specific memory, but she delivers it with enough conviction. It’s a serenade to the things we lose when we grow up, and her refusal to let go of those “ponies.” The piano work here is confident, driving the melody forward with a maturity that suggests she’s spent thousands of hours at the keys since she started composing at age five.
@draariaworld Some days practicing was easy, some days it was really hard but I kept going. Feel The Light is the sound of that journey and everything I learned along the way. ✨ Stream Feel The Light now on your favourite music platform.
♬ original sound – Aaria
Then there is the title track, “Feel the Light.” It’s a bit of a genre-bender, pulling in elements of rock, pop, and even some world music influences. It’s an optimistic call to action, urging listeners to protect what matters most. Our environment, our families, and our peace of mind. There is something incredibly honest about a kid singing about her love for the trees and the power of a flower. It doesn’t sound naive. It sounds like a reminder of things the rest of us have forgotten.
Her choice of covers is equally telling. Beyond the Elvis nod, her rendition of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” is a standout for its sheer ambition. It’s a song that has been covered by everyone from Jeff Buckley to Bon Jovi, but Aaria takes it in a completely new direction. She brings in lyrics in Eastern and Western languages, bridging the gap between her heritage and her current home. It’s a call for global unity that references multiple belief systems, turning a song of individual sorrow into a collective prayer for the planet. The fact that she can navigate French, Bengali, and English in a single performance shows a level of cultural literacy that most adult artists never bother to achieve.

Other tracks like “Sunshine Up High” and “Gems & Jewels” further cement the album’s emotional core. The latter is a simple, touching tribute to the idea that family is the ultimate treasure, far outweighing any material wealth. It’s a sentiment that could easily feel saccharine in less capable hands, but Aaria’s delivery is so earnest that you can’t help but believe her. Even the instrumentals, like “Presto,” show off her technical chops, proving she can hold an audience’s attention without saying a single word.
Feel the Light is a record that respects the classical foundations of music—the piano, the composition, the vocal control, while embracing the modern world’s need for sustainability and connection. Watching a very young artist headline concerts and command a room the way she does shows that talent doesn’t always wait for permission to show up. She’s already performed across the US, Canada, and India, and those stages are only going to get bigger.
It’s easy to get caught up in the numbers, the hundreds of thousands of views and the press accolades, but the real story is the music itself. Aaria is a young artist who sees the world with a clarity that most of us lose somewhere along the way. Feel the Light is a gift of perspective from a girl who knows exactly who she is and exactly what she wants to protect.





























