Cross-genre artist Gabrielle Vaughn has released new single “Erase It.” She typically combines Pop, Rock, Soul, R&B, and alternative genres and has been seen performing around Nashville at venues such as City Winery, The End, Eastside Bowl, and EXIT/IN, and on tour dates to the East Coast.
Vaughn shares about the single:
‘Erase It’ comes from a very emotional place for me. I wrote this after the loss of a few relationships that I never thought would come to an end the way they did. I was having a conversation with someone about these situations, and vividly remember saying, ‘All the shit they did, I wish I could just erase it.’ We all have those moments in our lives we wish we could erase and eliminate just to keep the good memories intact, to see those people in their best light. I immediately resonated with that idea, got my phone out, and wrote down the title – ‘Erase It.’
When my producer extraordinaire, Jesse Brock, sent me this specific starting loop, I felt drawn to combine these lyrics with the sonic experience Jesse crafted so beautifully. (Plus, it always feels like he can crawl into my brain and pull out exactly what I feel). The instrumentation feels raw and emotive while still keeping the more alternative pop sound I hold in my arsenal. It instantly felt special when it came together and was one of those ‘Oh, we cracked the code on this’ moments. I am so proud of this song. It’s painful, truthful and feels wounded yet healed all at once. It’s all I’ve ever wanted to create with a song.
Gabrielle Vaughn will continue to roll out new music this year, which will be produced by Grammy-award-winning producer Jesse Brock (Notelle, PI3RCE). Vaughn is also a member of the all-female supergroup ElectraQueens.
They recently collaborated with The Bacon Brothers (Kevin Bacon and Michael Bacon) on a recent release of their new EP Erato, “Let Me Happen to You Girl” and Kathy Sledge of “Sister Sledge” on a cover of “You Are Everything” by The Stylistics.

Vaughn is also an advocate and member of the LGBTQ+ community and “always strives to stand for the rights of queer folks and empower them through her platform, appearances, and performances.”

