Shigady doesn’t just write songs—he opens doors into rooms most people keep locked. Coming out of Fairfield, California, he brings a sense of vulnerability you can feel before the first note even settles. His latest single, Picture Perfect, sits at the center of a world he’s been shaping through his album Love Beneath The Moon, a world where emotion doesn’t whisper—it pulses.
Picture Perfect moves with a softness that still hits like truth. It’s a portrait of connection painted without filters, a moment suspended between wanting someone and trying not to break in the process. Shigady lets the cracks show, and somehow makes them beautiful. It’s the kind of record that sounds like it was written late at night when the mind won’t slow down, but the heart won’t shut up either.
That same spirit stretches through the fabric of Love Beneath The Moon. The project feels like a private diary left open on purpose—an invitation into the messier corners of closeness, where friendship and intimacy weave together until the lines stop mattering. Shigady doesn’t sanitize anything; he lets the tenderness, confusion, and pull of desire move exactly how they move in real life.
He balances playful energy with emotional depth, sliding from the lighthearted charm of a track like “Chill Guy” into the blunt honesty of “I Can’t Save You,” a song that sounds like two people saying what they should’ve said months ago. “Let’s Play House” and “Freak of the Week (F.O.W)” hum with temptation and spark, tracing the space where chemistry builds its own rules. Then there are moments like “I Wonder” and “Moving Mountains,” where he leans into uncertainty—trust, self-worth, and the work it takes to truly show up for someone.
The entire album breathes like a story told in phases: desire, hope, hurt, reflection, and the quiet bravery of trying again. It’s R&B dipped in moonlight—soft, confessional, melodic, and unafraid to let emotions sit in the foreground. Shigady has a way of making listeners feel seen, as if he’s singing the things people think but never say out loud.