A private line gone public. In this lo-fi confessional, bedroom-pop enigma Vyza Nemuri and genre-defiant rocker HAIQEEM untangle the wreckage of memory, music, and the mistakes that made them. What was once whispered now plays out in stereo.
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HAIQEEM Podcasts
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After the storm, it's not your hair- it's YOU!
7:36
7:36
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7:36The Season 2 finale of Nemuri Radio brings emotion, laughter, and legacy to the mic as Vyza and HAIQEEM reflect on the song that inspired a quiet revolution in both their hearts: Pamela Pantea’s “It’s Not Your Hair, It’s You.” With its slow-burning truth and sly country-jazz undertones that are pure rockabilly, the track becomes the anchor for one …
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The conversation opens with laughter and playful tension — HAIQEEM teasing Vyza about “changing the grammar just to make it sound sexier.” Vyza defends her version, explaining that the lyric rewrite reflects agency rather than revenge: “Pamela sang it like she was plotting. I sing it like I already did it.” As the discussion unfolds, the two trace …
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In this episode of Nemuri Radio, Haiqeem and Vyza have a reflective, back-and-forth dialogue about Vyza’s song Love Is Coming from her album Wiser. Vyza explains that the song was written in the future tense — not mourning old love or celebrating present love, but anticipating love that hasn’t yet arrived. She frames it as a prophecy: love will com…
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Vyza and HAIQEEM take on the messy beauty of incompatibility colliding with attraction. The conversation turns candid, tracing the sparks that flare when two people can’t seem to walk away from each other, even when they should. The centerpiece is “Fuck You I Love You” — first introduced on Wiser as a fiery duet. For this special broadcast, listene…
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In this episode, Vyza and HAIQEEM share a rare, glowing optimism. The hook “Happier Times Are Coming” threads through their conversation, a reminder that resilience and belief in tomorrow can’t be extinguished. Against the unspoken backdrop of turbulence in the world, they refuse to dwell in fear; instead, they choose light, unity, and forward moti…
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In this episode, Vyza and Haiqeem lean all the way into provocation and artistry, breaking taboos in a way only they can. The show opens with Vyza’s new track “You Can’t Afford Me, Baby” playing in the background — a dance-rock anthem laced with heavy blues riffs. The hook circles around the word “c#$%,” which becomes a repeated mantra at the end o…
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In this episode, Haiqeem and Vyza take on the C word — not just the slur, but the entire constellation of meanings it carries: control, chaos, commitment, confidence, collapse. The conversation cuts between playful sparring and razor-sharp reflection, pulling back the curtain on the words and wounds that shape both art and identity. At the heart of…
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Vyza and Haiqeem dive into the unapologetic fire of “So What?,” a song aimed at people who orbit too close without the gravity to last. With biting humor and raw honesty, they peel back the lies, the egos, and the noise, asking the only question that matters: so what?By HAIQEEM and Vyza Nemuri
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Season Two of Nemuri Radio opens with the title track of Vyza Nemuri’s sophomore album Wiser—a song born out of confession, courage, and a refusal to shrink. In this intimate episode, Vyza reflects on how Wiser became both her shield and her release, while Haiqeem steps in to reveal his own version of the song, which closes his Japanese album Yoru …
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The episode opens with Nemuri — the song Haiqeem wrote as an ode to Vyza’s name, a lullaby for the girl who, he swears, was singing it in her sleep. But when Vyza hears it, she insists she wrote it. She says he’s in the mix — and he doesn’t understand. But a careful listener will. What follows is a soft unraveling of memory and authorship, of share…
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Coming through the effing glass! (Kamikaze, biiitch!)
2:25
2:25
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2:25It’s not “Kamikaze Bitch.” It’s “Kamikaze, Bitch!” — a deliberate pause, a reclaiming, and a challenge. When Haiqeem fumbles the title, Vyza doesn’t let it slide. She corrects him without blinking, and from there, the episode barrels into a sharp, stylish declaration of female agency. This episode captures the making of the song — a volatile anthem…
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Haiqeem recalls the night he wandered through the Hollywood Hills, lost in himself, barefoot and unraveling. He confesses how he ended up outside Vyza’s La Brea hotel, collapsing in her lap, sobbing, “Don’t leave me. Don’t leave me.” Vyza doesn’t interrupt—she was there. Her voice is soft, haunted, steady. Together, they revisit that moment not wit…
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Vyza and Haiqeem sit together and quietly revisit the night that birthed the song — the one neither of them can forget. In the heart of the episode, “Crying in Your Lap,” Haiqeem recalls the moment he broke down without warning, collapsing into her lap in a wave of grief and exhaustion. She didn’t speak. She just let him cry. This episode moves bet…
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Vyza and HAIQEEM revisit “Dream Come True” — the song that still makes him cry. “I’m proud of you,” he tells her, barely holding it together. It’s tender, uneasy, and strangely final. Then comes Tokyo Blue. She teases him. He deflects. She gives him a nickname. “You’re naming me now?” he laughs — but not all the way. There’s something unspoken betw…
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Vyza arrives late to the studio — sunglasses on, stories half-told — while Haiqeem waits, already recording. What unfolds is a slippery, electric conversation about her single “Shopping” and how luxury isn’t just indulgence — it’s survival. They unpack the myth of “having it all,” the performance of invincibility, and how beauty can be weaponized w…
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Malibu Was A Mistake… (No Love on The Beach)
3:05
3:05
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3:05Haiqeem and Vyza reconnect for the first time in years. The tension is quiet, unfinished. “Malibu was a mistake,” she says. “Then why did we stay?” he asks. “Because you had the studio… and I had nowhere else to go.” This isn’t an interview. It’s a conversation in the aftermath. With music from her album Nemuri playing beneath them, Nemuri Radio be…
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