Morgan Evans Letting You Go: The Story Behind the Steel Town Standout

The Final Exhale: Why Morgan Evans’ “Letting You Go” is the Closure We Needed

Let’s be honest: watching Morgan Evans navigate the last couple of years has felt a bit like reading someone’s private diary. We’ve seen the heartbreak, the “over for you” phase, and the messy public transition. But with his new single “Letting You Go” it feels like Morgan has finally put the book down and walked out the door.

Tucked into his 2026 album Steel Town via Virgin Music Group, this isn’t just another breakup song. It’s the sound of a guy who stopped looking at his phone and started looking at the horizon.

“Living Through a Lens”

The track kicks off with a line that hits way too close to home for anyone with a social media account: “I was living my life through a lens / Keeping it real, and playing pretend.”

It’s a gutsy admission. Morgan is essentially saying he spent too much time performing his life instead of actually living it. Whether he’s talking about the “bullshit on the internet” or the pressure to stay “relevant” during a public split, the message is clear: he’s done with the performance.

Why this track sticks:

  • The Drive: Co-produced with Lindsay Rimes, it has this rhythmic, forward-leaning pulse. It doesn’t wallow; it moves.

  • The Grit: It’s pop-country, sure, but there’s a salt-of-the-earth Newcastle energy under the Nashville gloss.

  • The Pivot: There’s a specific lyric—“Sometimes you win when you lose”—that basically defines Morgan’s entire 2026 vibe. It’s about realizing that walking away isn’t a defeat; it’s a massive win for your mental health.

The Bridge to Steel Town

If the rest of the Steel Town album is a rowdy tribute to “old mates” and cold beers back in Australia, “Letting You Go” is the bridge that gets him there. You can’t truly go home until you’ve dropped the baggage you’ve been carrying, and this song is Morgan dropping the heaviest suitcase he had.

It feels less like a Nashville “product” and more like a conversation over a coffee (or something stronger) where someone finally admits, “Yeah, I’m actually doing okay now.”