Jessica Sole has dropped her new single, “Strangers Don’t”… and it hits deep.
This is her first release with New Motor Records, and it’s clear she’s entering a bold new chapter. The song is a haunting mid-tempo ballad that captures the quiet devastation of love slowly slipping away.
The Story Behind “Strangers Don’t”
Co-written with Patrick Kordyback (Delta Sweet, Stereos) and Madison Banham, the song explores the awkward, painful stage after a breakup… when someone who once knew you better than anyone becomes a stranger.
Sole explains:
“‘Strangers Don’t’ is a heartbreak song about forcing yourself to move on from someone who once felt like home… I wanted my emotions to be a little more lived in, instead of writing while they were still raw. After the first verse, the song almost wrote itself.”
The arrangement is understated. And the honesty… it’s raw. The kind of song that stops you mid-scroll.
A Sign of Artistic Growth
“Strangers Don’t” is more than just a new single.
It reflects Sole’s growth as an artist… her expanding co-writing, collaborations with other artists, and a growing catalogue of unreleased songs hint at a year full of releases.
Jessica’s Journey So Far
Sole has been building momentum for years. In 2024, she broke nationally with a #1 single on SiriusXM’s Top of the Country with “Heads Up”.
She continued her rise with “Lightning Strikes” and “Homesick”, while performing across Canada—at CCMA Country Music Week, Toronto’s CNE Country Stage, Blue Mountain Countryfest, Thunder Bay’s Live on the Waterfront, and Canada Day celebrations in Milton, ON.
Her online presence is just as strong, with over 20,000 followers and more than 5 million views on TikTok… proving that her songs resonate with fans everywhere.
Why You Need to Hear “Strangers Don’t”
“Strangers Don’t” isn’t just a song… it’s a story you feel. A heartbreak everyone can relate to.
It’s emotional. It’s honest. And it’s Jessica Sole showing why she’s one of Canada’s most exciting new voices in country music.
Listen… let it hit you… maybe even cry a little.
In country music, the Front Porch has long been a place of reflection. A place where you can look at the life you have inside that front door. A place where time almost seems to stand still, where you can get away. It’s also a place where you can go to observe the world as it passes by you. To think about your place out there beyond the driveway.
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch
- Front Porch





