
Tarric Finds Grace in Goodbye on New “The End of Me”
Some songs are soft exits. Tarric ’s “The End of Me” is a scorched-earth departure.
The L.A.-based artist, whose past work has flirted with new wave textures and cinematic melancholy, doubles down on both with this latest single from his upcoming album Method. It’s a breakup track, yes — but not the kind that begs for resolution or reinvention. This is the kind that walks into the ruins, surveys the damage, and keeps singing anyway.
The lyrics read like the last page of a journal you weren’t supposed to find. Lines like “I have lost the war but you can still retreat” and “This is the end of me and the start of you” don’t chase healing; they admit defeat with a poet’s precision. It’s about calling the moment for what it is, and letting the silence speak afterward.
This isn’t just a personal song—it’s a turning point in Tarric’s catalog. It sheds the polished relationship narratives from his debut album, Lovesick, and instead confronts something much harder to navigate: the slow dissolve of identity when loss and letting go become unavoidable. There’s no resolution, no healing arc here. Just acceptance.
You can tell this is someone who’s spent time behind both the mic and the camera. Tarric’s background in film and television — he’s currently producing CBS’s upcoming series Einstein, and previously worked on Operation Repo and Marmaduke. “The End of Me” feels less like a song and more like a closing scene: the one where the protagonist doesn’t win, but finally understands.
Tarric has always written music that feels like it belongs in a movie. With “The End of Me,” he’s made one that plays on loop long after the screen goes dark.