Emotional Profile
(Nostalgia · May 2026)
People drawn to "Touch and Go" are often those navigating life's transitions—career shifts, relationship uncertainties, or creative crossroads where commitment feels both necessary and terrifying. The song captures that electric moment of standing at the threshold, charged with possibility yet haunted by what might slip away. Listeners return to it when they need to feel understood in their ambivalence, finding permission to embrace both the thrill and the fragility of moving forward without guarantees.
Nostalgia hits you first—you're transported to a moment when things felt more alive, more possible. That pull backward unlocks a surge of energy that reminds you why you loved this sound in the first place. Suddenly, you're reconnected to a version of yourself that still believed in the power of music to move you.
You return to this song when you need to shake off stagnation, when you're standing at a crossroads and need permission to feel inspired again. It's the kind of track that finds you during those transitions—between chapters, between seasons—when you're searching for momentum. There's something about it that makes you feel like moving forward is possible.
The song was built as an AOR anthem meant to pump up the present moment, yet listeners found themselves reaching backward—the 1986 production and Corey Powell's vocals became a time machine rather than a rallying cry, anchoring the track more firmly in memory than momentum.