Two years of silence, and Beabadoobee comes back with a song about a person who might not exist. “All I Did Was Dream of You” pairs her with The Marías’ María Zardoya for a track that sits somewhere between longing and self-deception, and it’s the most emotionally complex thing she’s released.
That ambiguity isn’t decorative. It’s the engine.
The song keeps returning to the same question it never answers: is the person being sung about a real relationship, or a projection? The song keeps returning to how easy it feels, “I don’t have to think”, and that frictionlessness is itself the problem. Real relationships have edges. This one doesn’t, which either means it’s ideal or it isn’t real.
The chorus line, “stay or just leave me be,” operates as the hinge point between two entirely different interpretations. In one, she’s addressing someone who showed up and turned out to be a nightmare: beautiful at first, toxic underneath, now impossible to dislodge. In the other, nobody showed up at all. She’s asking a fantasy to either materialise properly or stop haunting her. Both readings work, and the song holds them without forcing a verdict.
The title gives the game away. “All I Did Was Dream of You” isn’t a love song. It’s closer to an admission that she got lost somewhere between wanting something and inventing it.
In other words, the meaning of “All I Did Was Dream of You” sits inside that uncertainty.
The track opens in a slow atmospheric murk, indie rock that moves like it’s half-awake, uncertain of where it’s going. It doesn’t arrive fully formed. The arrangement slowly fills out: drums coming in, electric guitar gaining weight, the production expanding outward until the whole thing lands with what early listeners have correctly called a massive sound. The build mirrors the lyric’s movement from quiet longing into something harder to control.
The moment’s impact comes from the dissonant chord that drops in around the midpoint, refusing to sit clean against the rest of the progression. It signals something is wrong without making it explicit, which matches the lyric’s unwillingness to give the game away.
Then there’s the vocal arrangement. Beabadoobee takes the verses, the dreaming side. María Zardoya of The Marías takes the counter-position, singing about nightmares that “swallow me” before she lets go. Two perspectives on the same emotional territory, neither quite completing the other. The L.A. alt-pop group earned a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist at the 2026 ceremony off the back of their album Submarine, which explains why the pairing makes sense on paper. In practice, Zardoya’s soprano against Beabadoobee’s mid-range produces a texture that never quite turns into harmony, maintaining a productive friction throughout.
The song belongs to the same tradition people sometimes call yearning rock, big drums, layered guitars, emotional exposure, without being indebted to any one reference point. It’s more emotionally direct than most of Beabadoobee’s previous work while still carrying the hazy romanticism she built her audience on.
Filmed in Vilnius, Lithuania, at temperatures the singer described to Dazed as “−17°C”, the video was directed by Jake Erland, Beabadoobee’s partner and long-term visual collaborator who also shot the “Glue Song” video in the Philippines. The visual reference point is Yorgos Lanthimos’ 2025 film Bugonia, specifically its closing scene, which Beabadoobee cited as the direct inspiration.
The video places her in a series of winter vignettes: a bar packed with hockey players, a butcher’s counter, a frozen lake. She drifts through each with the particular detachment of someone walking through someone else’s memory. The dreamlike logic holds until a car explosion arrives mid-video, which she walks through without breaking stride.
Zardoya doesn’t appear onscreen. She was unavailable for filming, but her vocal presence on the track is no less concrete for that.
The release arrives under Beabadoobee’s global partnership between Dirty Hit and Interscope. Speaking to Dazed, she was clear this is transitional material, a track designed to bridge where she’s been and wherever the next record takes her. A follow-up album has not been announced, but the language she’s using in interviews suggests the wait won’t be long: “I literally can’t wait to release something, honestly. I’m fucking dying.”
She also appeared recently on the War Child HELP(2) compilation with a cover of “Say Yes”, but that was someone else’s song. This is new ground.
What “All I Did Was Dream of You” actually signals is a shift in ambition. The Rick Rubin-produced This Is How Tomorrow Moves was Beabadoobee expanding her sound outward into arena-ready pop-rock. This single pulls in a different direction: more cinematic, more psychologically knotted, built around a collaboration that adds genuine dramatic weight rather than just a featured credit.
Zardoya isn’t decorative here. She’s a counterargument.
Whether the next album follows this into darker, more expansive territory is the interesting question. On the basis of this, it should.
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