News

This page documents updates,music releases,stories behind songs, recording notes,and differnt moments connected to the Einherjar project.

Resilience in the Grey: The Making of Not Done Yet by Einherjar 

By Einherjar
May 2026

Last October, the air in East Tennessee started to turn sharp. I was sitting with a half-finished track that felt like it was stuck in the grey area of life — not destroyed, not healed, not finished, but still standing.

That was the space where “Not Done Yet” started to take shape.

As an independent artist, the journey is not only about the finished song. It is about the chapters that happen between releases. The doubt, the pressure, the isolation, the strange quiet moments where something inside you refuses to quit even when everything around you says it should be over.

That is what “Not Done Yet” became for me.

The Weight Behind “Not Done Yet”

I did not want this song to feel polished in a fake way. I wanted it to feel dark, personal, emotional, and heavy without losing the human core underneath it.

The track is built around resilience, but not the clean motivational kind. It is about the kind of resilience that shows up when you are tired, angry, uncertain, and still moving forward anyway.

“Not Done Yet” is for anyone who has been counted out, misunderstood, pressured, judged, or pushed to the edge of themselves — and still knew their story was not finished.

That message connects directly to the larger Einherjar project. “Call Me Pagan” deals with belief, judgment, identity, and refusing to be forced into someone else’s version of truth. “Not Done Yet” continues that emotional thread, but turns inward. It is less about what people call you and more about what it takes to keep going when life tries to wear you down.

East Tennessee and the Visual World Behind the Song

While I am a Miami-based artist, I have been working in East Tennessee while developing the visual world behind my music.

The woods, mountain roads, fog, isolation, weathered buildings, and heavy atmosphere of the region have started to shape the visual side of the Einherjar project. The music itself is dark, raw, personal, and atmospheric. The visuals are where the world around the songs becomes more cinematic.

That contrast matters to me. Miami is usually associated with light, nightlife, beaches, color, and motion. The visual direction I am building for Einherjar moves in the opposite direction — shadow, stillness, trees, roads, grey skies, and the feeling of being alone with something you have not survived yet.

More Than a Single

“Not Done Yet” is not just another release in the catalog. It is a statement of survival.

It sits beside “Call Me Pagan,” “Hex You,” and “Return To Root” as part of a larger body of work built around belief, survival, rebellion, identity, judgment, transformation, and self-definition.

The goal is not to make music that sounds like everything else. The goal is to build something honest enough that the right people recognize themselves in it.

Listen and Connect

You can listen to “Not Done Yet” and follow the official Einherjar music project through the links below.

Official Einherjar Links

This chapter is still being written.

Not done yet.

Einherjar Releases "Not Done Yet" Continuing the Project's Timeline 

Einherjar has released the new single “Not Done Yet,” marking the next step in a project built as a timeline of real-life experiences told through music.

Rather than following a single genre, Einherjar’s sound shifts depending on the moment it represents. “Not Done Yet” continues that approach, combining darker tones with a steady, grounded delivery that reflects persistence and forward movement.

The project has grown through previous releases like Call Me Pagan, Hex You, and Return to Root, each one tied to a different period of time. With “Not Done Yet,” the focus moves toward resilience—continuing forward without losing identity, regardless of what changes along the way.

Einherjar continues to build a catalog that functions as a long-form narrative, where each release adds another piece to the overall story.

Explore the Project

Learn more about Einherjar or explore the full catalog on the official music page.

Listen on Spotify | Apple Music

Einherjar Surpasses 300,000 Streams as an Independent Artist Gains Momentum 

Independent alternative artist Einherjar has surpassed 300,000 streams across platforms, marking a major milestone in the continued growth of the project.

Known for blending dark alternative, indie rock, and cinematic sound, Einherjar has built momentum through releases like Call Me Pagan, Hex You, and Return to Root. Each track represents a different chapter in an ongoing timeline told through music, lyrics, and visual storytelling.

Unlike traditional releases, the Einherjar project is structured as a narrative built from real-life experiences, loss, travel, and personal transformation. Every release reflects a different period of time and perspective.

Following this milestone, Einherjar continues to expand the project with new releases and ongoing content, building a growing audience across streaming platforms.

Listen to Einherjar

Explore more from Einherjar or listen to the latest releases on the official music page.

Listen on Spotify | Apple Music

Where the Einherjar Music Comes From 

The music and lyrics for the Einherjar project all come from real life experiences. Every song is based on something that actually happened, a place I’ve been, people I’ve met, or different phases of life over time. Nothing is written just to write a song — every track comes from a real place and a real experience.

A lot of the sound and atmosphere of the music comes from traveling and spending time in different places. Being on the road changes how you think, how you see people, and how you see the world. When you spend enough time moving around and experiencing different environments, it naturally starts to influence the music you write and the stories you tell.

Some songs come from good times, some come from bad times, and some come from periods of life where everything was changing. The lyrics are usually written first, and then the music builds around the feeling of the lyrics. Sometimes the song ends up heavier, sometimes more atmospheric, sometimes more indie rock. I don’t try to force the music into a specific genre. The song becomes whatever it needs to become based on the story behind it.

Mythology and symbolism also play a big role in the Einherjar project. The name Einherjar itself comes from Norse mythology, referring to warriors who have fallen in battle and are brought to Valhalla. That idea of struggle, growth, conflict, and moving forward after difficult experiences is a theme that shows up a lot in the music and lyrics.

The Einherjar project is basically a timeline of my life told through music. Every song represents a different chapter, a different place, a different experience, or a different mindset at the time it was written. As more music gets released, the catalog will continue to grow and tell more of that story over time.

This website is where everything related to the Einherjar project lives — music releases, lyrics, videos, photos, and updates. As new songs and new projects are released, everything will be documented here.