Signal State Records
BACK TO ME
/ Interview

BACK TO ME

Mason Raye on making music with a voice that doesn't exist - and why that might be the most honest thing he's ever done.

By Josh Miller Hamburg May 2026

There are albums you listen to. And there are albums where you feel like you've accidentally walked into something private. *Back to Me*, the debut album - the record that brought him to Signal State Records's attention - is clearly the latter. Eleven tracks, one story, one DeLorean - and an AI voice named Synara Vale who sounds like she belongs to a different era.

We meet Mason Raye on a Wednesday evening in Hamburg. He's on time, which surprises me. He's wearing his bandana, his glasses - of course - and chains that make a soft sound when he moves. He orders water and immediately asks if he can record. "I forget things otherwise," he says. "Important things."

Your first album was called Human After Signal. Soul, R&B, pop – but you’ve said publicly that you weren’t satisfied with it. Why?

It lacked a thread. That’s the most honest thing I can say about it. They were good songs – I stand behind every single one. But as an album, it didn’t tell a story. It was more a collection of moments than a place you could return to. And I wanted to build a place.

And the place you chose was the past.

I grew up with the 80s – not because I was born there, but because my father listened exclusively to music from the 80s. Hall & Oates, Tears for Fears, Prince. Those productions. Those synths. That sound shaped me more than anything that came after. So yes – if I was going to build a place, it was going to be that one.

I grew up with the 80s — not because I was born there.

The concept of the album – a DeLorean, time travel, Back to the Future as an emotional framework – sounds bold on paper. How did it come about?

It sounds bolder than it is, I think. I didn’t think: I’m going to make a Back to the Future album. I thought: what if someone was actually there. In the 80s. What would he miss? What would he hear? And then that question becomes a character – and the character becomes a story.

The character is you.

The character is me, yes. He drives into the past. Lives there. Plays shows. Goes to the arcade on Friday nights. That’s Insert Coin – that track is actually very simple. It’s a Friday evening in 1985. Nothing happens. He’s happy. But there’s something missing, even if he can’t quite name it.

And what’s missing?

Synara.

Hamburg, March 1985

Synara Vale – for anyone who hasn’t heard the album yet: who or what is Synara Vale?

She’s an AI voice. I’m saying that directly because I don’t want it to come out like a reveal, like some kind of trick. It’s not a trick. I worked with AI-generated vocals and at some point one of those voices had something – a quality, a texture – that I couldn’t let go of. I gave her a name. Synara.

And she plays a role in the album – not just as a feature, but as a character.

Exactly. In the concept of the album, she – in the present, running parallel to everything he’s experiencing in the 80s – finds cassettes in an attic. Photographs. Of him. From 1982, 1985, 1988. He’s performing. Making music. He looks exactly like the man she knows. And she doesn’t understand how that’s possible. That’s Found on Tape – her moment. Her attic.

That sounds like a very lonely song.

It’s the loneliest track on the album. Because she’s alone with this discovery. She can’t tell anyone what she’s found – who would believe her?

Two timelines. The same attic. Neither one knows about the other.

There’s this track – Playback Hearts – that sounds different from the rest. Quieter, more suspended. What kind of song is that?

That’s the song where both of them exist at the same time but aren’t together. He’s in the 80s. She’s in the present. But somehow – on a frequency that doesn’t know time – they’re hearing the same thing. Feeling the same thing. Playback Hearts tries to capture that moment: two hearts, same rhythm, wrong era.

Sounds like a love song that ignores physics.

[pause] That’s the best description I’ve ever heard. Can I steal that?

Back to the Future always understood „back“ as a direction. Ours is different.

When does he decide to come back?

When he realises that Playback Hearts – this song he’s writing – can’t be finished without her. There’s a voice missing. His voice alone isn’t enough. That’s the moment. He comes back, he gets her. Brings her to the past.

And what happens there?

[smiles] They make music. What else.

And then comes the moment of return.

At some point you have to go back. That’s the condition. The DeLorean doesn’t run forever. And the album — Back to Me — is that moment of return. An ode to everything that was. Back to the Future always understood „back“ as a direction – back to the future. Our „back“ is different. Back to me – back to who I am when I’m here, in the present, with her.

The album artwork shows the burning license plate. The tyre tracks. That’s very direct.

Yes, and that’s intentional. I didn’t want a cryptic cover. I wanted someone to see the cover and immediately understand: this is a tribute. This is love. Love for an era, for a film, for a way of thinking about music – and love for someone you meet in the wrong time.

Last question. What comes after Back to Me?

[long pause] The present, probably. The next album happens here. Now. No DeLoreans. Just what remains when you’ve come back.