In “Lying With You,” Tarric Finds the Ghost in the Sheets

In “Lying With You,” Tarric Finds the Ghost in the Sheets

Tarric ’s “Lying With You” is like walking into a room that still smells like someone you used to love—familiar, painful, and hard to explain.

The track plays like a confession buried in neon haze. It doesn’t ask for your sympathy. It just shows you the damage and leaves you to feel it. “Cause I’ve been lying with you,” Tarric repeats, letting the double meaning stretch out like a bruise across the whole song. Is he lying beside someone or to them? The answer is yes. Both. That’s the point.

Instead of offering emotional closure, Tarric invites us into the murk—the blurry line where self-betrayal and misplaced intimacy live side by side. The track doesn’t build toward anything explosive. It loops like a thought you can’t shake, dressed in synth swells and restrained production that feel more cinematic than commercial.

That sense of duality runs through Tarric’s story, too. Born and raised in the Midwest, he brings a blue-collar authenticity to his high-gloss, synth-laced pop. After relocating to LA with barely enough cash to get through the month, he built his life out of instinct and necessity—working in film and television while refining a sound that’s equal parts Stranger Things and Songs of Love and Hate.

His debut Lovesick had all the rush of new emotion—exhilarating, messy, often beautiful. Method seems poised to do something heavier: look back. And “Lying With You” is the ache at the heart of that reflection. It’s about what we agree to, what we sacrifice, and the lies we live in for the sake of keeping something that once felt whole.

Back to top