5 Reasons You Should Listen To 'Miscommunication (Lost In Transmission)' by Irem Bekter
- Louise Clark
- Apr 28
- 2 min read

Irem Bekter’s “Miscommunication (Lost In Transmission)” isn’t just a song—it’s a moving, multilingual snapshot of what it feels like when communication almost works, but not quite. Lifted from her album The Winding Road, the Montréal-based artist turns confusion into something oddly magnetic, weaving together rhythm, language, and texture in a way that feels both playful and deeply human. If you’re wondering whether it’s worh your time, here are five reasons it absolutely is.
1. It turns miscommunication into art, not frustration
Instead of treating misunderstanding as a problem to fix, Bekter leans into it as the creative core of the track. Voices overlap, meanings slip, and conversations miss each other entirely—but it all feels intentional. There’s a strange beauty in how the song refuses to resolve itself neatly, mirroring real-life conversations more honestly than most pop structures dare to.
2. It’s a global sound in constant motion
This isn’t a track tied to one place or identity. Bekter’s background—spanning Istanbul, England, Argentina, and Montréal—feeds directly into the sound. Turkish folk rhythms sit beneath shifting layers of English and French vocals, while a Spanish rap from Akawui slices through the mix. It’s less fusion for novelty’s sake and more like cultural overlap happening in real time.
3. The collaboration is genuinely next-level
The song is packed with talent but never feels overcrowded. Jean Massicotte’s arrangement keeps everything balanced, while contributors like Yves Desrosiers, David Ryshpan, Mathieu Deschenaux, Olivier Bussières, and Lu Horta each add distinct sonic textures. Every element feels like it belongs, even when the track itself is intentionally unstable.
4. It’s rhythmically rich and subtly addictive
Beneath the multilingual layers, there’s a strong rhythmic foundation that keeps everything moving. Bekter’s use of drum machine interacts with organic percussion in a way that feels both grounded and fluid. It’s the kind of groove that sneaks up on you—what starts as intriguing quickly becomes hypnotic.
5. It sits comfortably among boundary-pushing artists
Fans of artists like Beirut, Lhasa de Sela, or Ibrahim Maalouf will find familiar emotional and sonic threads here, but Bekter doesn’t imitate—she expands on that lineage. She brings a distinctly contemporary, multilingual perspective that feels rooted in lived experience rather than genre exercise.
At its core, “Miscommunication (Lost In Transmission)” is less about understanding everything and more about embracing what gets lost along the way. And somehow, that’s exactly what makes it worth listening to.
“With ‘Miscommunication (Lost In Transmission),’ Irem captures the beauty and humour in human connection, where words flow freely but meaning can slip through the cracks. It’s playful, rhythmic, and utterly distinctive, showcasing her unique ability to blend cultures, languages, and musical traditions into something wholly original,” - music publicist Danielle Holian, Decent Music PR



