Inked Mag Staff
March 25th, 2026
Naomi Sharon Taps Into Memory and Identity on New Single “Miss That”
Naomi Sharon opens up about her new single “Miss That,” her evolving sound, and how tattoos reflect memory, identity, and personal growth.
Naomi Sharon isn’t just singing about missing someone on her latest single “Miss That.” She’s capturing something harder to define. A feeling, a moment, even a version of herself that no longer exists.
“It’s not simply about missing someone,” she says. “It’s about missing a certain energy, a moment, or even a version of yourself within something.”
That emotional ambiguity is what gives the track its weight. It feels intimate without overexplaining, raw but still controlled. It also sets the tone for what’s next.
While “Miss That” leans into vulnerability, Naomi Sharon makes it clear this is only one side of the story. The music ahead will explore contrast. Different moods, different layers, and a more expansive sonic world.
“I trust simplicity more now,” she explains. “A feeling often says more than words.”
That mindset carries beyond the music and into her visual identity, where tattoos play a major role. For Naomi Sharon, ink is another form of storytelling. Some pieces are deeply personal, others more instinctive, but all of them hold onto something worth remembering.
That philosophy led her to tattoo artist Georgios Kazakis, whose intuitive approach made the process feel more like a conversation than a transaction.
“We spent around seven hours just talking before anything happened,” she says. “It felt like the tattoo already existed before it was drawn.”
The piece itself marks a specific chapter in her life, though she intentionally leaves parts of it open to interpretation.
“Not everything needs to be fully explained. It represents who I am right now and what I want to carry forward.”
Like her music, her tattoos capture moments in time. Both are rooted in the same instinct. Holding onto something you felt deeply.
With more music on the way, Naomi Sharon is focused on building a full experience. Not just songs, but a world.
“I want people to feel like they’re stepping into something.”
If “Miss That” is any indication, that world is going to feel as personal as it is immersive.
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