The Easy Part

Album: yet to be titled (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "The Easy Part" is a deceptively calm breakup track released by Gabby Barrett as the lead single from her third album on August 1, 2025. The song is a direct message to a romantic partner who's ending a relationship.

    Barrett explained, "It captures that emotional moment when someone thinks leaving is 'the easy part,' but what they don't realize is that the memory of who you were to them will be the hardest to forget."

    In other words, go ahead and slam that front door, but don't be surprised when the ghost of me takes up permanent residence in your conscience.
  • Where Barrett's debut single, "I Hope," was a Molotov cocktail of betrayed fury, "The Easy Part" is more like a handwritten note left on the kitchen table: composed, wistful, but still barbed with you'll-regret-it energy.

    Barrett described the two songs as distant cousins, noting that "The Easy Part" is "a different kind of heartbreak, one that settles in slow and quiet."
  • Barrett co-wrote "The Easy Part" with Jon Nite, Hardy and Zach Abend, with production handled by Abend, Zach Kale, and Ross Copperman. Nite and Kale were also behind "I Hope" in 2020, while Copperman produced that track as well.
  • "The Easy Part" is Barrett's first breakup song since "I Hope." Between the heartbreak bookends, her catalog reads like a highlight reel of her actual life. She fell in love, got married (to fellow American Idol alum Cade Foehner), had three kids, and wrote songs about all of it.

    Take "The Good Ones," for instance. It's a gentle, swoon-worthy tribute to the kind of partner you can build a life with - the dependable, faith-filled kind who still holds the door open. In "You're My Texas," Barrett gets a bit more poetic, using the Lone Star State as a metaphor for emotional safety and stability.

    And then there's the spiritual thread that winds through much of Barrett's music. "Jesus On A Train" tells a story of unexpected divine encounters, the kind that happen not in churches, but in ordinary moments if you're paying attention. "Glory Days" picks up that same theme with a touch more nostalgia, crediting life's blessings to something (or someone) bigger than herself.

    Even her duets, like "Pick Me Up," stay rooted in values; in this case, the kind of love that knows how to show up when things get hard.

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