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Ohzora Kimishima – 16:28

Kimishima turns passing moments into poetry, where time and emotion blur into song


©️ Ohzora Kimishima / No Public Sounds / UltravYbe



Ohzora Kimishima’s 16:28 is not just an instrumental mood piece it’s a fully realized song that blends heartfelt vocals with delicate instrumentation. The track carries a deep sense of vulnerability, as though Kimishima is opening a private journal and reading aloud through melody. His voice is soft yet weighted, sometimes trembling, sometimes soaring, guiding the listener into a space where unspoken feelings take shape.


The lyrics capture fleeting reflections longing, uncertainty, and the quiet beauty of time passing. Even without knowing every word, the emotion behind them is unmistakable. Kimishima sings in a way that makes you feel as if you’ve lived the same memories he describes, like walking through a moment you’ve both lost and held onto forever.




Musically, the song is subtle but layered. Shun Ishiwaka’s drumming is restrained, never overwhelming, almost like a heartbeat beneath Kimishima’s words. The instrumental backdrop weaves around the vocals, supporting without overshadowing guitars echo like distant thoughts, while soft textures wrap the track in a dreamlike haze.


What makes 16:28 stand out is its honesty. It’s not flashy or loud; it’s tender, real, and unguarded. Kimishima doesn’t just perform the song, he feels it in real time, letting the listener hear both the cracks and the beauty in his delivery. That rawness is what makes the track universal it isn’t just his story anymore, it becomes ours too.




The official music video mirrors this intimacy. With minimal imagery books, light, small details it reflects the everyday nature of the emotions in the song. Ordinary objects suddenly feel heavy, as if they too carry memory and meaning. It’s a reminder that music doesn’t just live in sound, but in the spaces and silences around it.


16:28 proves that Kimishima has a rare gift: the ability to turn a deeply personal moment into something universally felt. It’s a song that doesn’t just ask you to listen, it asks you to remember, to feel, and to sit with yourself for a while.

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