Parachute (Hayley Williams song)

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ReleasedAugust 28, 2025 (2025-08-28)
Length3:40
LabelPost Atlantic
"Parachute"
Single by Hayley Williams
from the album Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party
ReleasedAugust 28, 2025 (2025-08-28)
Genre
Length3:40
LabelPost Atlantic
Songwriters
  • Hayley Williams
  • Daniel James
  • Steph Marziano
Producers
  • Daniel James
  • Steph Marziano
Hayley Williams singles chronology
"Glum"
(2025)
"Parachute"
(2025)
Music video
"Parachute" on YouTube

"Parachute" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Hayley Williams, released on August 28, 2025, as the second single from her third solo album, Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party. It was issued through Williams' own imprint Post Atlantic two years after her departure from Atlantic Records. "Parachute" was the only previously-unheard track added for the album's official release, following Williams's surprise release of 17 standalone singles earlier in the summer. A rock song driven by lyrics of heartbreak and regret, "Parachute" earned viral popularity. Critics singled it out as a powerful closing track on the album, praising Williams’s raw vocal delivery and emotional songwriting. It was nominated at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards for Best Alternative Music Performance.

Williams first previewed the material from Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party in July 2025 by uploading 17 unsequenced songs to her website as a surprise project called Ego.[1][2][3] Those tracks were later distributed individually to streaming platforms on August 1, 2025, marking her debut as an independent artist post-Atlantic.[1] On August 28, 2025, Williams officially released the full album with an additional song, "Parachute," which had not been heard during the initial rollout. Upon its release, "Parachute" became the album's second single and an accompanying music video was published.[4][5]

Composition and lyrics

"Parachute" is an alternative rock track that channels heartbreak and disillusionment in its sound and lyrics.[4][6] It opens with a moody, guitar-based arrangement before building into its climax with intense vocals by Williams.[4] Lyrically, the song addresses the aftermath of a failed relationship: at one point Williams agonizes that "you were at my wedding / you could’ve told me not to do it," a line delivered as a strained shout in the second verse. Writing for Rolling Stone, Maya Georgi explains that Williams’s voice on "Parachute" "strains with hurt". The arrangement grows "cacophonous and raging with regret" as the track progresses, underscoring the bitterness and sorrow in the lyrics.[4][7]

Critical reception

Charts

References

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