Lyra, the producer, closed her eyes. She had spent three weeks chasing this specific sound. It wasn't just "ambient" or "techno." It was something raw. The "naked" part of the title wasn't about a lack of clothes; it was about the lack of armor. It was the sound of a digital soul being stripped of its filters until only the electricity remained.

She hit Save , the cursor blinking like a lonely star in the corner of the monitor. The Naked Angel was ready to fly, or fall, depending on who was listening.

: Then came the breakdown. Silence, save for a grainy recording of a thunderstorm Lyra had captured in Berlin. Out of the rain, a vocal chop emerged—unintelligible but desperate. It was the moment the Angel realized that being "naked" in this world wasn't a weakness; it was the only way to truly feel the current.

: At the three-minute mark, the bassline stabilized. This was the landing. The "Angel" was now on the ground, walking through a city of neon and chrome. The melody was lonely—a single, repeating cello sample pitched up until it screamed like a violin.