Indie-Pop Standout Rachel Bochner Reckons With Her Past on “Happier You’re Gone (SASE)”

Sometimes the hardest goodbye is the one you say to yourself. Brooklyn artist Rachel Bochner makes that idea sing on her new single “Happier You’re Gone (SASE),” a sharp, emotionally charged piece of indie-pop that turns the wreckage of heartbreak into something liberating.

Bochner has built her reputation on candid lyricism and a willingness to dig into the messier edges of love, identity, and self-discovery. This single pushes that further. What first reads like a breakup song reveals itself as something more layered, a confrontation with the past self who stayed too long, ignored too much, or simply didn’t know better yet.

The meaning stretches in more than one direction. It could be aimed at a former lover, or at a more complicated internal farewell, but it ultimately lands as a letter of good riddance. “A post-breakup note, or a ‘see-you-never!’ to a formerly destructive self,” Bochner explains. After finishing the track she added “SASE,” for self addressed stamped envelope, to the title as a knowing detail for anyone paying close attention.

The song grew from a vivid dream in which she met a previous version of herself, and it captures a striking realization: she’s happy that earlier self happened, but much happier she’s gone. That duality gives the track its resonance, balancing raw vulnerability with hard-won resolve. Produced by Jackson Hoffman, it leans into an indie-pop landscape with alternative edges, pairing emotional weight with a textured, expansive backdrop that keeps Bochner’s voice front and center.

The single opens a window onto her upcoming album, a body of work rooted in the aftermath of a long-term relationship and the messy process of self-redefinition that followed. As a queer artist, Bochner’s experience sits at the heart of that shift. “I didn’t realize I was queer until my mid 20s,” she says. “Despite my best efforts, the life I’d spent years building no longer felt like home, it became a hand-built prison. Accepting that meant facing I had no choice but to leave it behind.” That turning point shapes a record moving through grief, identity, and the slow arrival of acceptance.

With “Happier You’re Gone (SASE),” Bochner does more than revisit the past. She rewrites her relationship to it, and hands listeners permission to let go, evolve, and find peace in who they’ve become.