A deeper dive into the EDM group band Cloudier, from their lyrical content to the narrative lurking behind each songs. Disclaimer: This analysis is just from my perspective, and not everything in this post is 100% correct or claimed to be the intention of the artists in the first place.
Cloudier, the EDM duo comprised of Cloudifield (Mididuck) and Reichuu (Jelly), have created a series of interconnected songs that, when analyzed chronologically, reveal a profound narrative journey. While most electronic music projects focus primarily on creating individual tracks designed for emotional impact or danceability, Cloudier appears to have crafted something more ambitious—a conceptual album told across multiple releases that potentially explores the human psyche with remarkable depth and nuance.
This analysis explores how their songs weave together to tell a cohesive story of escape into fantasy, confrontation with reality, mental health struggles, and ultimately, healing and growth. By examining the lyrical content, emotional progression, recurring motifs, and musical elements across their work, we can uncover a narrative that transforms seemingly separate songs into chapters of a single, powerful story.
Act 1: Escape into Fantasy
Song 1: Artificial (Cloudfield ft. Reichuu)
"Artificial" serves as the crucial entry point to Cloudier's narrative, introducing the fundamental tension between reality and fantasy that will drive the entire story. Released under "Cloudfield ft. Reichuu" rather than the Cloudier name, this positioning hints at the fragmentary state of the protagonist's psyche—not yet fully integrated into a cohesive identity, much like the artists' collaboration itself.

Cloudifiled first song with Reichuu, Artificial
The song opens with an immediate expression of conflict:
"I'm holding on to this world
But somehow everything feels so surreal"
These first lines establish the dissociative experience that forms the core of Rei's struggle. "Holding on" suggests both effort and precariousness—she is actively trying to maintain her connection to reality but finding it difficult. "Everything feels so surreal" indicates derealization, a common symptom of various mental health conditions where reality itself feels dreamlike or artificial. This opening immediately places us within Rei's subjective experience rather than describing her circumstances objectively.
The next lines deepen this sense of dissociation:
"I'm holding on to thin air
Until now I can't tell if you're there"
"Holding on to thin air" suggests that what she thought was solid support is actually insubstantial—perhaps a relationship or belief system that has collapsed. "I can't tell if you're there" introduces ambiguity about whether she's addressing a real person who has become distant or an imaginary figure she can no longer clearly perceive. This blurring between real and imagined relationships becomes a central theme throughout the narrative.
"My trembling arms and trembling frame
Can't shake my aim can't shake my game"
The repetition of "trembling" emphasizes physical manifestations of anxiety or withdrawal, grounding the psychological experience in bodily sensation. Yet despite this physical instability, she asserts determination—"can't shake my aim can't shake my game"—suggesting both resilience and possibly denial. This contradiction between her deteriorating state and her insistence on maintaining course creates dramatic tension.
The chorus delivers the core emotional revelation:
"Just let me go
I'm losing control"
Unlike later songs where she resists returning to reality, here Rei appears to be pleading to be released from something—possibly a maladaptive coping mechanism or fantasy world that once felt controlled but now feels controlling. "I'm losing control" suggests that what began as a voluntary escape has taken on a life of its own, a common experience with dissociative coping mechanisms.
"Open up your eyes and see