Ryne Meadow – “Sinner”
“Sinner” hits with a kind of anger that never sounds put on. Ryne Meadow writes from a place of real hurt, and that gives the song a clear purpose right away. This is tied to being condemned by a family member for being queer, and that personal wound gives every line more force. The track does not dance around the issue or water anything down. It goes straight for the hypocrisy at the center of the song and stays locked in from start to finish, it’s a song that has meaning.
A big part of why it works is how specific the target is. Ryne is taking aim at Christian nationalism and at religious figures whose public image falls apart under even basic scrutiny. That focus gives “Sinner” a real backbone. The song is angry, but it is not messy. It is pointed. It is controlled. It knows where that anger comes from and where it needs to go. The details about private behavior clashing with public morality make the whole thing land even harder.
Another reason the song lands is that it does not settle for vague outrage. The details behind it make the emotion more convincing, because the criticism is aimed at people who preach virtue while living by a different set of rules. That tension gives the track extra bite. You can hear someone pushing back after being hurt, judged, and cornered for too long.
I also like that Ryne does not try to sound detached or polite here. The confrontation suits the material. My opinion is that “Sinner” is bold, sharp, and easy to remember once it is over. Check out Ryne Meadow’s previous releases, follow the artist, and keep an eye on whatever comes next.
