Some songs don’t just sound right — they burn. “Fireman”, the latest collaboration between X.irda and ReMark, is one of those rare tracks. A haunting pop-rap ballad, both tender and explosive, like a heartbeat pulsing through smoke. More than just a song, it’s a collision of opposites: fire and water, love and loss, the urge to save and the instinct to run.
Two souls, one combustion
Following the striking “Disguise”, the Franco-Slovak duo returns with an even more intimate offering. X.irda, a Lyon-based producer and genre-blending artist, builds a lush, cinematic backdrop: ethereal layers, organic textures, and silences that speak louder than words. Over this emotional canvas, ReMark delivers vocals full of ache and honesty — a voice balancing on the edge of collapse.
Their chemistry is undeniable: a delicate dance of contrast where softness doesn’t extinguish the fire. And the chorus says it all:
“You were the water / I was the fireman”
How do you love without burning out? How do you save someone without losing yourself?
For those who love until it hurts
“Fireman” isn’t just a love song. It’s an anthem for those who keep coming back to the flames, knowing the danger but unable to walk away. For the unarmored hearts who carry their feelings like silent medals. For the ones who love too much, too deeply, and still hold on.
In a musical landscape often driven by bravado, X.irda and ReMark choose raw sincerity. Their vulnerability is their strength — and it hits hard.
Counting down to Losing Control: an album on the edge
“Fireman” is just the beginning. It sets the tone for Losing Control, the duo’s upcoming joint album set to release on August 29, 2025. A deeply personal record exploring emotional turbulence, fractured love, and those suspended moments when everything could fall apart.
With thousands of streams already racking up, the duo is carving out a unique space in the modern pop-rap scene — channeling the emotional depth of artists like Juice WRLD, Post Malone, and Yung Xavi, yet building something wholly their own.
“Fireman” is a warning and a promise: when emotion catches fire, the music will always burn true.