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Vincent J. Rigney Confronts Love, Money, and Reality in “My Love Is Just Enough”

  • Writer: Fernando Triff
    Fernando Triff
  • May 15
  • 2 min read

Artists like Vincent J. Rigney have a unique creativity that inspires them to get inspired with their own ideas and create music that you will never forget. His music is very earthy but high-end and he uses raw and polished instruments in the creation of his songs.



Vincent was raised in a small industrial city called Corby so naturally much of what he creates has that same industrial look and feel. You can hear it in his voice as he sings, you can feel the concrete under his voice, the base of the instrument and the warmth in the surrounding structures. His style is a combination of blues and alternative rock, with guitars that demand your attention because of how they are used, not because they are blaring at you.


My Love Is Just Enough is Rigney's new single and while it is a beautiful and powerful song, it does not come with a lot of fireworks or over-the-top production values, instead he is taking the high road and being honest about the feelings people have for each other and how they become affected by the monetary values of a relationship.


This song tells the story of a couple where one part of the relationship (the female) has equated her spending on material things to loving and/or intimacy and the male in the relationship is starting to put together that you cannot buy how much you love someone or how intimate you are with some one.


You can buy things with money, however you cannot fill the void of silence and be totally at peace when you have to fill your house with material goods that do not bring you peace or fulfillment.


That concept is the essence of the song like stale beer and late-night conversations; repetition, regret, and realization.


Yet when you listen to the acoustic version recorded in Corby it completely changes your perception of the song; it suddenly feels closer/more vulnerable and you can hear each chord breathing; the place Rigney is most effective is by creating a sound that feels real versus manufactured.


After building momentum through live shows, blogs worldwide, radio airplay, and being placed on playlists outside UK, he continues to carve his path while still retaining all the imperfections that makes him so interesting; his first album 'Songs From The Water Tower' introduced fans to the very personal stories he has written about his hometown and life experiences, and now with 'Steel Town Boy' being released late in 2026 he sounds more confident in himself.


Not louder - just more real.


That is probably worth something today in the music industry.



 
 
 

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