Dear Miss

Album: released as a single (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Dear Miss" is a multilayered ode to love and self-improvement. The song is structured as a letter where Zach Bryan admits that his past misadventures make him feel undeserving of his partner's affection. Yet, his unwavering devotion and her forgiving nature suggest that perhaps, just maybe, he is worthy of her love.
  • There's a playful ambiguity about who "Miss" might be. On one hand, the song opens with "There's a letter to your mother that is hidden in my desk," suggesting that "Miss" could be addressing his partner's mother. On the other hand, the verses can be read as a direct, heartfelt missive to the woman who has captured Bryan's heart. This double entendre adds layers of meaning to a song that is at once a declaration of love and an apology for past missteps.
  • Bryan tends to write about heartbreak, whether he's lamenting a doomed relationship in "Something In The Orange," grieving over a lost love in "Dawns," or dealing with the lingering presence of his ex in "High Road." However, "Dear Miss" offers a more optimistic perspective. It concludes with Bryan's lover acknowledging his imperfections and "ugly lessons" as "worth every last second with me."
  • First teased in 2024, around the time of Bryan's breakup with Brianna "Chickenfry" LaPaglia, "Dear Miss" seems to straddle the line between personal confession and universal longing. With its themes of flawed yet fervent love, the track hints at the complexities of a relationship teetering between being utterly doomed and the very possibility of salvation.
  • Bryan wrote the song, and his longtime producer Eddie Spear produced it. Some of Spears' other notable production credits include Sierra Ferrell's album Trail of Flowers and Sam Barber's Million Eyes EP.
  • A diehard Philadelphia Eagles fan, Zach Bryan promised "Blue Jean Baby" ahead of the NFC Championship game if they pulled through. When they won, he delivered the song.

    Bryan did the same thing before the Super Bowl, telling fans if his team won, he would drop a second song called "Dear Miss." He made good on that promise too, merrily giving the song an official release two days after the Eagles' triumph over the Kansas City Chiefs.

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