Drew Regan explores repetition, restlessness, and alt-pop’s emotional gray space on “if i could get away.”
There’s a certain kind of artist who doesn’t shout to be heard.
Drew Regan is one of them.
The Nashville-based alt-pop artist moves in subtleties — sharp melodies layered over textured production, hooks that feel effortless but intentional. With his newest single, “if i could get away,” Regan introduces the emotional landscape of his debut EP, again, again, arriving February 11.
At its core, “if i could get away” feels like a thought you’ve had before but never quite said out loud. It lives in that in-between space — the tension between escape and attachment, between staying and running. The production is atmospheric but controlled, giving his melody room to breathe while still carrying an undercurrent of urgency.
Influenced by artists like Porches and Dominic Fike, Regan blends pop instinct with alt-rock edge and electronic texture. But what separates him from easy comparison is restraint. The track doesn’t overwhelm. It simmers. It lingers. It invites you to sit in the uncertainty rather than resolve it.
And that’s where again, again begins to reveal itself — in repetition. In cycles. In the patterns we return to even when we promise ourselves we won’t.
Drew Regan isn’t just releasing a single. He’s introducing a perspective — one that embraces emotional gray areas and turns them into melody.
With “if i could get away” setting the tone, Drew Regan’s debut EP Again, again arrives on March 27th — a project poised to expand on the cycles, restlessness, and emotional gray spaces hinted at in this first release. If this single is any indication, we’ll be pressing repeat.