The vocalist avoids the trap of trying to mimic Zerrin Özer’s soul-stirring vibrato. Instead, they opt for a that suits the genre. In the verses, the vocals are breathy and intimate, sitting low in the mix. As the song progresses, the singer pushes into a higher register, bringing a sense of urgency to lyrics that talk about how even the smallest things—a path, a song, a dream—have no meaning without the beloved. Why It Works

This rock cover, however, manages to pull off a difficult feat: it swaps the orchestral longing of the 1980s for a gritty, modern catharsis without losing the song’s inherent romanticism. The Sound and Arrangement

It doesn’t replace the original (nothing could), but it breathes a different kind of fire into those classic lines.