A Voice from Heaven: Mick Jagger and His Son Deveraux “Devi” Jagger Unite for a Haunting Father–Son Duet That Defies Time
It feels almost divine — as if music history has just been rewritten.
Legendary Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger and his young son Deveraux “Devi” Jagger have released a never-before-heard duet titled “You’re Still Here,” a song so deeply emotional that listeners around the world are calling it “a message from heaven.”
Long thought lost among decades of studio archives, the track resurfaced unexpectedly — and with it, a sound that transcends generations.
A Song That Connects Generations


At its core, “You’re Still Here” is more than a song — it’s a dialogue between father and son, between the past and the future.
The lyrics speak of presence and memory, of holding on when life pulls us apart. For parents who have watched their children grow, or children who’ve had to say goodbye too soon, the song cuts deep.
Mick’s voice, weathered and soulful, carries the weight of time — each note steeped in love, loss, and reflection. Devi’s tone, by contrast, is light and pure, the sound of renewal. When their voices meet, it feels as if time itself pauses — the old and the young converging somewhere between this life and the next.
The Rediscovery of “You’re Still Here”
Sources close to the Jagger family say the recording emerged during the cataloging of old studio sessions — initially mistaken for an unfinished demo. But what producers uncovered was something complete, raw, and achingly intimate: a moment of unfiltered connection between father and son.
For Mick, now in his 80s, the song reflects a lifetime spent balancing fame with family, legacy with love. Though he’s guarded much of his private life, this duet opens a rare window into his heart — tender, human, and unafraid of vulnerability.
Fans and fellow artists have already called it “one of the most personal works Mick Jagger has ever shared,” with some describing it as “a love letter between father and son — and between life and eternity.”

Lyrics That Heal the Soul
The full lyrics haven’t been officially released, but fragments shared online have already taken on a life of their own.
Lines like “I hear your laughter in the rain” and “You’re still here, even when you’re gone” have become instant mantras for those carrying memories of someone they’ve lost.
In a world still mending from grief and distance, “You’re Still Here” lands like a healing prayer — a reminder that love doesn’t vanish when time moves on; it simply changes form.
A Legacy Beyond Music
For Jagger, this isn’t just another chapter in his legendary career. It’s a reflection on legacy — on what remains when the spotlight fades.
Decades after reshaping the sound of rock and roll, he now turns inward, offering something eternal: a father’s voice reaching toward the future through the voice of his child.
Deveraux, just eight years old, may not yet grasp the magnitude of what he’s created. But his presence gives the track a pulse of hope — a bridge between generations, carrying forward not only the Jagger name but the emotional truth that defines timeless art.
A Song That Moves the World
Since its release, “You’re Still Here” has swept across social media, drawing millions of views and tears in equal measure. Fans describe it as “a spiritual experience,” sharing their own stories of love, loss, and remembrance.
One listener wrote, “It’s as if Mick Jagger is singing to all of us who’ve lost someone — reminding us that love never truly leaves.”
The music video only deepens that sentiment: home footage of Mick holding baby Devi fades into scenes of the two walking hand-in-hand. The passage of time becomes visual — love, everlasting.

A Timeless Conversation
What makes “You’re Still Here” extraordinary is its universality. You don’t have to be a Rolling Stones fan to feel it. It’s a meditation on love that outlasts loss, on connection that refuses to fade.
In the final chorus, as Mick’s gravelly tone melts into Devi’s gentle one, something sacred happens — the echo of generations speaking to one another through melody.
A Voice from Heaven
In the end, “You’re Still Here” isn’t just a duet. It’s a revelation.
It reminds us that music, at its purest, isn’t about fame or charts — it’s about connection, the invisible thread binding hearts across time and memory.
For Mick and Devi Jagger, this is more than a song. It’s a message suspended between worlds — a voice from heaven, whispering that love never fades.
As one fan beautifully wrote beneath the video:
“It’s not just Mick Jagger and his son singing.
It’s every parent and child who ever loved each other beyond this life,
whispering — You’re still here.”





