News
Baby Rose turns Let Me Go into a soft exit from the wreckage
By Editorial Team - June 16, 2026
Summary
Baby Rose releases Let Me Go from YEARNALISM, reflecting on healing, sorrow and the rare grace of ending something without burning the house down.
Key Facts
- Category: News
- Published: June 16, 2026
- Tags: baby rose, let me go, yearnalism, secretly canadian, alternative soul, r&b, Alternative Soul / Healing R&B
Baby Rose’s Let Me Go arrives on 16 June as another piece of the emotional puzzle leading toward YEARNALISM. Following But, Nvm and Friends Again, the new single is framed around yearning, healing and the difficult grace of wanting freedom without destruction. That is a mature kind of heartbreak writing. Not every ending needs a crash, a villain, a dramatic last scene in the rain. Sometimes the hardest version is softer: still caring, still wanting peace, but knowing the door has to open. Baby Rose has the kind of voice that can make restraint feel enormous, and Let Me Go sounds like it sits right in that strength. The song’s accompanying video, directed by Amaya Segura and Rae Blackman, gives the release a visual frame, but the core is simple and effective: release can be gentle and still be final.