I Hope This Helps
Alana Springsteen
I Hope This Helps is the sophomore album by Nashville-based country singer-songwriter Alana Springsteen, released on 29 May 2026 via Santa Anna Nashville. It follows her 2023 debut Twenty Something — a three-part exploration of early adulthood — and arrives after an intensive period of personal work that Springsteen has described as therapy, healing her inner child, and difficult conversations with family. She co-wrote and co-produced all 16 tracks, playing guitar and piano throughout, working alongside collaborators including Sam Martinez (known for his work with Bailey Zimmerman and Caroline Kole), Chris LaCorte (Tucker Wetmore, Adam Doleac), and Jared Keim. The album is structured with an intro, interlude, and outro, giving the collection a deliberate storybook arc. Springsteen described its intention as "a rejection of fear and a call to become the author of your own story," and said the title is layered: both a hope that listeners will feel less alone on their own journeys, and a private acknowledgment that the songs themselves carried the hardest conversations she needed to have.
Lyrically, the album documents Springsteen's journey through identity, generational trauma, fear-based faith, and self-reclamation, treating healing not as a destination but as an ongoing process of unlearning. Opener "note to self" sets the tone with a devastating first line — "You started life as double lines nobody planned for" — while "same God," co-written with Emily Weisband, addresses finding one's own relationship with spirituality outside the faith of her upbringing, and "selfish" traces the process of leaving people-pleasing patterns behind. "black sheep," the album's second single, captures Springsteen's sense of being an outlier within her own family. Apple Music praised the album's "Swiftian" attention to detail and vivid storytelling, while Gigview called it "her strongest" record to date — "honest, relatable and beautifully written from start to finish" — and Rough Trade described it as "a deeply personal account of self-reclamation" in which "self-compassion becomes an act of defiance."
I Hope This Helps
Alana Springsteen
I Hope This Helps is the sophomore album by Nashville-based country singer-songwriter Alana Springsteen, released on 29 May 2026 via Santa Anna Nashville. It follows her 2023 debut Twenty Something — a three-part exploration of early adulthood — and arrives after an intensive period of personal work that Springsteen has described as therapy, healing her inner child, and difficult conversations with family. She co-wrote and co-produced all 16 tracks, playing guitar and piano throughout, working alongside collaborators including Sam Martinez (known for his work with Bailey Zimmerman and Caroline Kole), Chris LaCorte (Tucker Wetmore, Adam Doleac), and Jared Keim. The album is structured with an intro, interlude, and outro, giving the collection a deliberate storybook arc. Springsteen described its intention as "a rejection of fear and a call to become the author of your own story," and said the title is layered: both a hope that listeners will feel less alone on their own journeys, and a private acknowledgment that the songs themselves carried the hardest conversations she needed to have.
Lyrically, the album documents Springsteen's journey through identity, generational trauma, fear-based faith, and self-reclamation, treating healing not as a destination but as an ongoing process of unlearning. Opener "note to self" sets the tone with a devastating first line — "You started life as double lines nobody planned for" — while "same God," co-written with Emily Weisband, addresses finding one's own relationship with spirituality outside the faith of her upbringing, and "selfish" traces the process of leaving people-pleasing patterns behind. "black sheep," the album's second single, captures Springsteen's sense of being an outlier within her own family. Apple Music praised the album's "Swiftian" attention to detail and vivid storytelling, while Gigview called it "her strongest" record to date — "honest, relatable and beautifully written from start to finish" — and Rough Trade described it as "a deeply personal account of self-reclamation" in which "self-compassion becomes an act of defiance."
