Ever woken up in a king-size bed that somehow feels smaller when the person you love disappears? In “Nightmares,” Genoa-born storyteller Bresh, backed by the playful indie crew Pinguini Tattici Nucleari, turns that lonely mattress into a full-on emotional rollercoaster. The lyrics jump between witty pop-culture snapshots (John & Yoko, limoncello, Tibetan sky burials) and raw confessions of regret. Bresh admits he read his partner “in the dark like Braille,” only to wish he had never opened the book at all. What follows is a blur of fogged-up car windows, therapy bills paid with song royalties, and late-night drives where the cold outside mirrors the chill inside his chest.
Yet amid the gloom, the song is weirdly uplifting. Its catchy hooks transform heartbreak into something you can dance to, proving that even the worst breakups can fuel big choruses and bigger sing-alongs. “Nightmares” is essentially a love letter written in invisible ink: once the light hits, you can see every flaw, every missed “I’m sorry,” and every unspoken truth. It hurts, it heals, it grooves – and it reminds English learners that vocabulary like king-size, freezer, and incubi can come wrapped in an irresistible Italian beat.