Eden Rain Releases "I've Hidden Your Passport"

A heartfelt single from the 'Can I Come Too?' EP.

POSTED BY ZOE TYLER

Eden Rain is crying in the club, your club. The Leeds-born, London-based songstress just dropped “I’ve Hidden Your Passport”, a stunning slow-burn that hurts like a goodbye you weren’t ready for. It’s her most emotionally raw track to date, and it hits different because it’s about the quieter heartbreak of watching someone drift away, and trying to delay the inevitable with one last desperate gesture. The track also marks the first glimpse into her new EP Can I Come Too?, out September 25.

Produced by Iain Berryman, it weaves vulnerability into dreamy alt-pop textures that echo long after the last note. Eden doesn’t just write songs she keeps receipts on all your feelings.

Heartbreak, but Make It Domestic

I’ve Hidden Your Passport is as haunting as it is gentle. Eden’s lyrics feel whispered straight into your collarbone intimate, cheeky, and quietly devastating. The concept: stalling your best friend’s move to Australia by hiding her passport, because you love her like a greyhound loves its owner fiercely, delusionally, and with full commitment. Over soft indie-pop production, Eden processes that aching limbo where you know someone has to leave, but your heart refuses to pack their bags. There’s a kind of comedy in her heartbreak, and it cuts even deeper because of it. Think: laughing while crying, texting while spiraling.

The Frazzled Pop Poet Steps Into Her Own

This isn’t Eden’s first heartbreak rodeo, but it may be her most profound. Can I Come Too?, her upcoming EP, promises more of this textured, messy tenderness, equal parts diary entry and group chat voice note. From Von Trapp family sing-alongs in Yorkshire to sold-out shows in London, Eden’s trajectory is anything but linear, and that’s exactly what makes her special. She’s not here to be polished; she’s here to be real, chaotic, and impossibly relatable. With co-signs from BBC Radio 1 and The Line of Best Fit, plus her biggest headliner yet at Oslo in London on October 14, Eden’s world is expanding, but she’ll still make you feel like the only person in the room. Hide your passport, you won’t want to leave her orbit either.

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