There is a particular kind of honesty that only arrives after a long life in music. It is quieter, more deliberate, and far less interested in impressing anyone. That is the space Steve Borne occupies with ‘Problem Child’, a song that feels less like a comeback single and more like a personal reckoning set to melody.
‘Problem Child’ does not chase trends or attempt to modernize itself for algorithmic favor. Instead, it leans into classic songwriting values. Strong narrative and restraint. The production, recorded in Boulder, Colorado, favors warmth and clarity over excess, allowing the song’s core message to remain unobstructed. This is rock music shaped by Americana storytelling, not for spectacle, but for connection.
Borne’s career has never followed a straight line. From Emmy-winning sound work in film and television to widespread recognition as part of the children’s music project Princess Katie & Racer Steve, he has spent decades working across genres and audiences. Yet ‘Problem Child’ feels distinctly adult in its intent. It confronts the weight of personal labels, family dynamics, and emotional inheritance without trying to resolve them neatly. The song understands that growth does not always arrive with closure.
What gives this release additional gravity is its context. After undergoing life-threatening heart surgery in 2023, Borne returned to songwriting with a sharpened sense of purpose. Survival has a way of stripping away artistic vanity, and that clarity is evident here. ‘Problem Child’ is not interested in being polished. It is interesting to be true.
Lyrically, the song carries a sense of reflection rather than accusation. It does not seek to rewrite the past or assign blame. Instead, it acknowledges complexity. The kind that listeners recognize immediately because they have lived it themselves. This is music for people who understand that identity is often shaped as much by pain as by love.
In an industry that frequently rewards immediacy and surface-level emotion, Borne’s approach feels almost defiant. He allows space for discomfort. He trusts the listener. And he embraces the idea that songs can be conversations rather than statements. That philosophy aligns with his own belief that difficult stories matter, especially when music can make them easier to approach.
‘Problem Child’ ultimately succeeds because it does not try to explain itself. It simply exists, confident that authenticity is enough. For longtime listeners, it signals a meaningful new chapter. For new audiences, it offers an entry point into an artist who has little left to prove and much left to say.
To continue your journey with Steve Borne’s music, don’t miss his latest single ‘in the leaving light‘, now available on Spotify.





























