
Tarric Reveals New Track “You Were Gone” from Future Album
On “You Were Gone,” Tarric‘s latest single from the upcoming album Method, he leans even further into the unspoken, into the kind of emotional distance that creeps in while you’re still holding someone close. It’s a moment of realization, and Tarric captures it with surgical control.
The arrangement is focused, leaving space for the lyrics to do the heavy lifting. Tarric isn’t trying to dramatize the feeling of loss; instead, he holds up the emotion and lets you study it. He knows exactly what he’s doing.
Lyrically, the song orbits a single realization: the person you loved has been gone longer than you admitted to yourself. It’s not confrontational. It doesn’t wallow. The refrain—“And all of this time you were gone”—is less an accusation and more a surrender. Tarric doesn’t have to raise his voice; he’s already said everything that matters.
“You Were Gone” is the emotional anchor of Method, Tarric’s highly anticipated follow-up to his debut album Lovesick. Where his first album explored the highs and lows of relationships—each song reflecting a different chapter in a love story—Method appears to be the next logical step—it dives into the aftermath. “The methods by which I dealt with the emotional fallout are pretty well documented here,” Tarric explains. “It’s truly a snapshot of what was going on at that time.”
Tarric’s music draws from the rich textures of ’80s new wave, with nods to bands like The Smiths and Depeche Mode, but he’s never hiding behind nostalgia. The sound is familiar, yes, but it’s sharpened for clarity, stripped of sentimentality. Every element in the mix is doing its job.
Beyond his music career, Tarric is also making waves in the television and film industry. Currently producing CBS’ much-anticipated new show Einstein, which is expected to debut this fall, Tarric’s career spans both artistic mediums. He has previously produced the film Marmaduke (starring Emma Stone and Luke Wilson) as well as the reality series Operation Repo, which ran for seven seasons and 183 episodes.
“You Were Gone” is Tarric’s way of saying: I’m still here, still processing. It’s a process anyone can relate to—and that’s the beauty of it.
Listen to “You Were Gone” here: