Parissa Tosif’s ‘Fury’ is a Pop Reflection on the Cost of Revolution
The Iranian-Australian artist takes the first steps of a solo career ahead of a new album in 2026, with a deeply personal pop reflection on Iran, its revolution and its women.
For years, Parissa Tosif's voice has been the pulse of electronic duo, Vallis Alps. Now, with a solo album scheduled for a March, 2026 release, the Iranian-Australian artist is carving a new personal space with her music, one that bridges the rhythm of modern pop with the spiritual heritage of her Iranian ancestry.
This new chapter was introduced by her previous release, ‘I Sing For You', a moving 90-second soundscape built from family voice notes and memories, serving as a dedication to Tosif’s daughter, the women of her lineage and the women of Iran at large.
'Fury', however, provides a fuller understanding of what her upcoming album - and her solo career as a whole - might promise. The track aims to pull a political story down to a human scale, as Tosif sets her focus not on the grand narrative of the Iranian Revolution, but on the smallest, most vital unit impacted: a couple. The song explores the friction that occurs when two people, bound by love, suddenly find themselves inhabiting different realities as the world shatters around them.
Caught between worlds and fighting for her family, the protagonist of the song represents the lineage of strong women in Tosif's life. In an era of constant social and political turbulence, the track reminds us that every historical shift, every major societal change, first washes over individual lives. It can put a nation in conflict, friends at odds, even change the way one partner looks at the other over the breakfast table - and the strength of the track' lies in its gaze at that kind of emotional weight.
The musicality retains shaded of the luminous Vallis Alps spirit, yet the subject matter adds a gravitas that is entirely Tosfi's own. The track is brave and deeply thoughtful - a shimmering pop reflection on the personal cost of revolution, but also on the resilience of the human spirit.














