Fedge delivers an uplifting pop anthem for the relationships that quietly drift from our lives — not through conflict, but through time, growth, and circumstance.

Blending cinematic production with intimate storytelling and an emotionally soaring chorus, Wish You Well speaks to former partners, past best friends, and almost-relationships that never fully became something more. Instead of heartbreak or blame, Fedge leans into gratitude, acceptance, and emotional closure.

At the heart of the track is a message of grace: loving someone enough to let them go while wishing them happiness beyond your shared chapter. The chorus — “We’ve been through heaven and through hell / I’ll always wish you well” — carries both ache and warmth, inviting listeners to reflect, release, and move forward.


“I don’t think every ending needs to be tragic to be important. Some relationships are seasonal. Some are short stories, not novels. And that’s okay. This song is my way of saying thank you and goodbye at the same time.” - Fedge

Following the emotional candor of Can’t You See, the defiant self-worth of Invisible to You, and the introspective grief of Wish I Saw the Signs, this release reveals another dimension of Fedge’s storytelling: closure without bitterness and healing without forgetting.

As the final single before his debut EP Through It All, arriving this spring, Wish You Well represents a moment of emotional resolution within the project’s larger arc of healing, identity, and self-acceptance.

“I hope people feel a little lighter when they hear it,” Fedge says. “Maybe you dance. Maybe you text no one. Maybe you remember that something doesn’t have to last forever to have been good.”


Artist bio: Fedge is a Taiwanese American artist turning raw emotion into glittering pop. Based in San Francisco, his debut EP Through It All, arriving this spring, is both cinematic and confessional, exploring identity, healing, and the quiet strength of coming home to yourself. “I make music to heal myself and hopefully help someone else feel less alone along the way,” Fedge says.