Don't Let Me Go

Album: A Wonderful Life (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Don't Let Me Go" sounds, at first blush, like it might be another tender Tom Odell slow-burner filed somewhere between the hushed heartbreak of "Another Love" and the visceral emotional pull of "Can't Pretend." But linger for a moment and it reveals itself as something more unnerving: a love song written with one eye on the apocalypse and the other stubbornly fixed on devotion.
  • The track floats in on an ethereal, romantic melancholy, the sort Odell has made a minor cottage industry of, but here the yearning feels sharper, more urgent. It's love in a burning city, intimacy unfolding while the world quietly collapses in the background. As Odell put it, there's now a "sense, almost every week, that the world is ending in some capacity, which it is, for some people."
  • The spark came from an AI-generated Instagram meme showing two people laughing on a train, hypnotized by their phones while the city outside is literally on fire. "Outside the city is on fire but they don't seem to care," Odell told The Sun. "It's a very powerful image, and I thought it really resonates with the age we are living through."

    "For me the song is very much inspired by a kinda sense of looming apocalypse," he continued. "The fire raging outside, but inside life seems to go as if everything is normal. That despairing thought, 'Why does no one seem to care' The comet in the sky in melancholia."

    Yet for all its smoke and fire, "Don't Let Me Go" is also about devotion, the kind that shows up when escape routes are gone. Odell frames love as a near-religious commitment, invoking doomed romances and last-stand tenderness: Jack and Rose clinging together as the Titanic slips under, Anna Karenina stepping toward the train, even the quiet fatalism of Death Cab for Cutie's "I Will Follow You into the Dark."
  • Odell co-wrote the song with longtime collaborator Laurie Blundell, his songwriting partner since his 2021 Monsters album.
  • Odell recorded "Don't Let Me Go" at London's RAK Studios. Blundell and Alex Gould (son of Level 42's Phil Gould) produced the track, with a full band giving it a more organic, live feel: drummer Toby Couling, bassist Max Goff, guitarist Max Clilverd, violinist Richard Jones, and Blundell himself handling orchestration and synths. It's a notable shift away from the string-heavy polish of Odell's 2024 Black Friday album, signaling his desire for something more raw and less comfortable.
  • The discomfort embedded in the song extends to the visuals. Directed by Alex Leggatt, the video unfolds inside a vast, empty box, part void, part purgatory, built in a London studio and inspired by 1970s conceptual artists Doug Wheeler and James Turrell. Light and space do most of the talking. A ladder appears, nodding to Jacob's Ladder, as Odell attempts, and fails, to follow another figure into a higher realm, tumbling back to earth instead. Heaven, it seems, remains just out of reach.
  • Released on April 25, 2025, "Don't Let Me Go" serves as both the lead single and opening track of Odell's seventh album, A Wonderful Life, a title that feels knowingly ironic given the surrounding flames. Odell wrote much of the album on tour, scribbling lyrics on planes, deliberately keeping things unpolished and exposed.

    "I want my music to be an invitation for others to feel," he said. "To not be afraid to feel anything, to feel sadness, to feel joy, anxiety at times, pain and fear. More and more, I feel like my duty is that."

    In "Don't Let Me Go," that invitation comes with a quiet warning: the world may be ending, but love, inconveniently, refuses to stop asking for our full attention.

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