In Honesty (Psalm 139), Fiona Amaka turns introspection into radiance. Her latest single is a delicate unveiling, a song that feels as if it were whispered to the soul before it was sung aloud. The London-based singer-songwriter, long admired for her ability to thread truth through melody, steps into new spiritual territory here without abandoning the candor that defines her craft.
The song began years ago as a blues meditation, tucked away and nearly forgotten. When it resurfaced this spring with a gentler folk brightness, Fiona felt its revival wasn’t just musical, it was divine timing. What was once somber now glows with warmth: acoustic guitars sway like an open breeze, a tender rhythm keeps its quiet pulse, and Andy Zanini’s slide guitar shimmers through the verses like sunlight on still water.

Fiona’s voice carries the song’s essence: grounded yet reaching. She sings of being seen, known, and loved completely, echoing Psalm 139’s timeless message: that divine awareness is both our mirror and our mercy. There’s a vulnerability in her tone that transcends genre, a rare mix of confession and comfort that invites listeners, believers or not, to pause and breathe.
Produced between London and Los Angeles, the track blends folk-rock ease with crystalline vocal layering, striking that balance between earth and spirit. It’s music that could fill a chapel or drift through a late afternoon window with the same quiet authority.
With Honesty (Psalm 139), Fiona Amaka shares the process. It’s the sound of rediscovery, of a forgotten prayer taking new shape; and in that rebirth, she reminds us that light often returns not with thunder, but with a simple, steady glow. The kind that finds you when you’re finally still enough to let it in..






