Groover City Radio AAC+ Groover City Radio AAC+
Groover City Radio HD Groover City - Tune in, turn up!
play_arrow
Keeana Kee “Tik Tok”: The Ultimate Summer Anthem Groover City
The Part Of Me You’re Worried About Is The Same Part That Made You Fall For Me
— Andi Jane
When I first heard Fly Away, I caught myself smiling at the nerve of it. Because Americana rarely flirts with this kind of freedom so openly. And I love this take – the effect feels confident. Andi Jane sings with a tone that feels recognisable in a way you trust.
The message steps forward with a steady point of view: love thrives on trust, motion, and honesty. That idea lands right in the opening lines about laughing with somebody else while devotion stays put. It hit me like a slap at first. Then I realised there’s a real conversation here, far from the usual mess. That matters.
The lyrics look doubt in the eye and talk it down, like this has been done before. Love turns into wind inside a thunderstorm. Fire becomes identity rather than danger. I hear resolve in that language.
When she sings about being on fire since the day she was born, it reads like self-knowledge you don’t argue with. The chorus keeps returning to one simple request: let me fly, then let me come back home. That rhythm feels like breathing in and out, freedom and commitment moving together. That idea cracked down like thunder.
Musically, the song comes straight into string-band ground – banjo, mandolin, fiddle, upright bass. Then the arrangement makes a smart choice: it lifts.
It gives the voice space, and nothing fights for the front seat. Instruments step back when the voice steps forward. The production keeps its hands light, this song speaks, and everything else listens. That’s all it needs.
Then there’s the video, and this is where the song turns cinematic. Jane jumps with a parachute, captured through close on-body shots while jumping, floating, and singing. The camera stays almost breath-close, which makes the moment feel personal rather than performative.
Gravity does the job, and calm takes over. The visual language matches the lyric’s core idea: movement without panic, surrender without loss. Watching it, the song and the image finally line up.
Fly Away puts Andi Jane right where she stands today as an artist. Since stepping out solo, she’s kept moving, release by release, stage by stage. Her upcoming album The Ground Is Changing lands February 13, and the title already tells you where her head is. Fly Away sets the tone. Americana stretches here by stepping onto ground people actually live on, and I respect that. Songs like this trust the audience to think, feel, and maybe loosen their grip a little.
If you want to stay close to what she’s building, Andi Jane’s out there on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok. I’ve followed already.
Written by: Flav
2026 Americana andy bluegrass Country folk Jane Love Nashville


+00:00
Groover City PRS & PPL licensed © 2026