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‘Happy Songs for Sad People’: Lane Moore + It Was Romance Release First New Music in a Decade

Written by on February 14, 2025

Lane Moore + It Was Romance are back! It’s been a full decade since the band – fronted by comedian, actress, writer and musician Lane Moore – released its self-titled debut and now its back with Final Girl, via Mint 400 Records.  

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The four-track EP, produced by Moore and Grammy Award-winning Bryan Russell (Coldplay, Paul Simon) is a return to form with pop-rock jams that Moore lovingly calls “happy songs for sad people.” Lead single and opening track “Playing Records” kicks things off with an ode to cautious optimism, and brings the listener into a playful sound that also tackles big themes, like mental health.  

Inspired by Moore’s favorite acts — including Paramore, Depeche Mode, Robyn and Lights (the Canadian musician she named her dog after) — Final Girl will take fans back to the It Was Romance of a decade ago, with a touch more synthesizer and a heavier lean into pop.

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“I love playing around with textures and sounds,” Moore tells Billboard. “I call this record happy songs for sad people because that’s my favorite genre of music – really dancey songs that you go, ‘Oh, wait. What is this about?’ That’s just my favorite genre – something dancey with something real behind it. I think a lot of people feel that way, where it’s like, ‘This hits so hard, but it also has so much emotion.’” 

While the wait has been long for fans, Moore says that the new music – made alongside her full band, which includes Angel Lozada (drums), Ryan Ross (bass) and Lisa Bianco (lead guitar) – has been ready to go since 2020, but remained unreleased because of the pandemic. When the label recommended the new music be released on Valentine’s Day, Moore felt it was fate.  

Valentine’s Day “is perfect for so many reasons. So much of what I do really talks about love and connection,” says Moore. “With the band name It Was Romance, there was a lot screaming that this is when this should happen.” 

Prior to the band’s East Coast tour dates (which go on sale today), Moore sat down with Billboard to discuss the band’s return and how she created happy songs for sad people.  

The songs on this EP are five years old. Do they feel outdated to release now? 

So much of the album is about struggling with connections, struggling to have faith that the world is going to get better, that your life is going to get better. It’s wanting so much to be hopeful, but everything around you is kind of a nightmare. It feels a lot like destiny that this record is coming out now, when that is so pervasive — even more than when I first wrote these songs. It is divine timing, even though it was hard to have to wait.  

“Playing Records” feels like the perfect song for a Valentine’s Day release.  

I wrote that song when I was so depressed, and it is the happiest song. I met someone, and I was like, “You know what, I’m gonna choose to be excited that this could be good even though maybe it won’t be.” It is celebrating those moments, when for a second, something good is happening. It is so easy to blow past those moments.  

It’s a daily practice for me to linger on joy, to linger on hope and the things that are really nice in your life. Our brains are so wired to linger on this person who says something really shitty. Our brains have this negativity bias and I love a song that instantly infuses your brain with happy chemicals. One of the greatest things that music can do is change your mood.  

“Final Girl” has a similar theme. 

That song specifically was about the fear of when something good happens. When you start dating someone, you meet somebody new and they seem great. We don’t talk enough about how terrifying that is. For a lot of us, myself included, it’s so much easier to meet somebody who’s mediocre and kind of sucks. Your brain knows what to do with it. You meet who seems really great and it’s “I don’t have the neural pathways for that.” That’s its own horror movie in my mind, which is why I gave it that title.  

Why did you go with Final Girl for the entire EP title? 

I wanted to call it Final Girl, because so much of it is about survival, and surviving all of these things that feel like they’re impossible to survive. And I’m also a really big horror movie fan, and I was thinking about the idea of a final girl, and it can mean so many things, and I relate to final girls more than pretty much any other character archetype. I probably know what that says about me. You feel like you keep getting knocked down but then you get back up again and somehow you don’t die. You get another shot, another shot at joy and survival. 

“TBA” is the most energetic song on the EP, and feels like the perfect example of happy songs for sad people.  

I wrote that song at a time when I didn’t really have my people around me, like friends or people to call if I need something. So that song was about so many of us realizing I have to be my own best friend. I have to take care of myself, even when I actually need back up. I also wanted to write about how much I hate when people say, “If you need anything, call me.” I hate that freaking phase. People were saying it to me all the time, and I was thinking — even if it is well meaning – what an empty phrase if somebody’s struggling.

I wanted to talk about something that I noticed a lot, which is how we view mental health versus physical health issues. There was somebody that I was playing music with at the time — he got into a minor car accident and everyone was like, “Oh my god. We’ve got to help him.” He was totally fine, but when there is a physical thing, people know what to do. But if you’re struggling with mental health stuff, a lot of people were like, “We don’t know what to do with you. Let me know if you need, I don’t know, a soda. Bye.” It was the loneliest feeling, and I wanted to write about that.  

Should fans expect more music soon? 

Absolutely. I’ve got to get this out into the world and then hopefully go back into the studio this year. I have so many songs that I have written that it’s been kind of a I Love Lucy conveyor belt of chocolates. This is a completely new chapter of an entirely new book, with a lot more music.  

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