June 16, 2026
Rachel Bochner

Brooklyn-based artist Rachel Bochner has built a reputation for sharp, emotionally charged indie-pop that cuts straight to the core. Since her debut, she’s carved out a space defined by candid lyricism and an unflinching willingness to explore the messier edges of love, identity, and self-discovery. Now, with her latest single “Happier You’re Gone (SASE)”, she enters a new chapter, one that feels both deeply personal and transformative.

At its heart, “Happier You’re Gone (SASE)” is a reckoning. Written from a place of distance and hard-won clarity, the track reframes the aftermath of heartbreak into something more introspective and ultimately liberating. What initially reads as a breakup song reveals itself to be something more nuanced: a confrontation with the past self who stayed too long, ignored too much, or simply didn’t yet know better. For Bochner, the meaning stretches across multiple interpretations, whether that’s a past lover or a more complicated, internal goodbye, but ultimately lands as a letter of good riddance. “A post-breakup note, or a ‘see-you-never!’ to a formerly destructive self,” she explains. After finishing the song, she added “SASE” (self-addressed stamped envelope) to the title as a final, knowing detail, a small piece of context for those paying closer attention.

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Inspired by a vivid dream in which she encountered a previous version of herself, the song captures a striking realization: I’m happy she happened, but I’m much happier that she’s gone. It’s this duality that gives the track its resonance, balancing vulnerability with a sense of resolve. Sonically, “Happier You’re Gone (SASE)” leans into an indie-pop landscape with alternative edges, reflecting Bochner’s evolving sound. Produced by Jackson Hoffman, the track pairs its emotional weight with a textured, expansive backdrop that allows her voice and her story to sit front and center.

The single offers a glimpse into Bochner’s upcoming album, a body of work rooted in the aftermath of a long-term relationship and the complex process of self-redefinition that followed. The wider record navigates themes of grief, identity, and acceptance, shaped by the end of that relationship and the unraveling that followed. As a queer artist, Bochner’s experience sits at the center of that shift, disentangling years of love, guilt, and self-realization. “I didn’t realize I was queer until my mid-20s. Despite my best efforts, the life I’d spent years building no longer felt like home–it became a hand-built prison,” she says. “Accepting that meant facing I had no choice but to leave it behind,” a turning point that shapes the entire record that orbits her queer identity’s entanglement with insurmountable guilt, revelatory grief, and the start of complex acceptance. 

With “Happier You’re Gone (SASE)”, Rachel Bochner doesn’t just revisit the past; she rewrites her relationship to it. And in doing so, she offers listeners something powerful: permission to let go, to evolve, and to find peace in who they’ve become.

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Image provided courtesy of LPR
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