
Jazz-soul artist Anton Commissaris continues to cultivate his warm, timeless musical universe with โKeep My Faith in Love,โ a new single that glows with a soft, steady optimism. Recorded in the San Francisco Bay Area and inspired by greats like Stevie Wonder and Antรดnio Carlos Jobim, the track sits comfortably in that dreamy space where jazz, bossa nova, and soul overlap. Commissaris has spent the last few years crafting a catalog rooted in emotional sincerity, and this release feels like another page of that story, one that celebrates devotion.
The song eases in on lightly glinting piano chords and a gentle Latin-leaning rhythm section. The percussion is organic and warm, like someone tapping their fingers on the arm of a patio chair while the sun sets. Then the horns come in, bright, rounded, full of breath, setting the tone before Commissarisโย deep, smooth, and unhurried voice enters. He sings like someone who has lived enough life to speak softly and still be heard. He sings convicted, โThe best things take a while / I wanna see you smile / Gonna keep my faith in love.โ Itโs not naive optimism โ itโs chosen optimism, tested and reaffirmed.
As the arrangement unfolds, textures bloom and a flugelhorn vividly blows, while subtle bass movement anchors the groove, and later, soft female harmonies lift the bridge into something featherlight and reassuring. By the outro, the horns swell again, turning the song into something almost cinematic, like the final dance at a late-summer gathering.
Nothing about โKeep My Faith in Loveโ tries to dazzle with complexity. Instead, it trusts in warmth, in patience, in lasting, nurtured romance. Listen to it on Spotify.
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Review by: Naomi Joan

