
There are songs that pass. And then, there are songs that stay — that carve out a space in your memory and refuse to leave. “Let It Go” by TWOFEW is one of those rare moments in music where everything — the instrumentation, the story, the emotion — aligns perfectly.
From the first deep, resonant guitar notes, you know this is an experience. The rhythm lingers like a heartbeat in slow motion. It pulls you into a space where emotion leads, and noise disappears.
Then comes the voice — expressive, commanding, intimate. It’s telling you something real. A story you didn’t know you needed to hear, carried by a melody that feels like comfort and courage at once. There’s a quiet brilliance in how TWOFEW blend pop sensibility with soft rock textures, never falling into cliché, always pushing for sincerity.
If the great bands of yesterday had a conversation with the future, TWOFEW would be the bridge. Their arrangements are intricate without being overwhelming, emotional without being theatrical — the kind of craftsmanship we rarely hear anymore.
TWOFEW, the piano-fronted family rock band from Phoenix, are proving with “Let It Go” that timeless music still exists — and that it can come from artists who aren’t afraid to be vulnerable, raw, and real.
Don’t stream this track while multitasking. Sit with it. Breathe with it. Let it do what great music is meant to do: move you.
“This one’s for the couples still showing up. For the parents holding it down. For the ones who’ve learned what to fight for—and what to let go. Massive sound. Real heart. No filters. Let It Go is about letting the small stuff fade… so the love, the family, the memories—that real stuff—can shine.”
David Lazar – Guitar
Danielle Lazar – Bass
Michael Jon Lazar – Piano and Lead Vocals
John Sebring – Drums