Gracie Abrams posted behind-the-scenes footage on Instagram Wednesday and captioned it “LAML bts” with a tag for creative collaborator @phojoh. That’s the whole drop. Four words, one tag, nothing else.
Her fanbase moved quick. The post crossed 147,000 likes – a real number for a project with no formal announcement behind it. That kind of response tells you exactly where Gracie stands with her core audience right now.
Abrams has been building serious momentum over the past few years. The Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter made her name with emotionally direct indie-pop, the kind of confessional writing that hits on headphones and travels well across streaming. She writes like someone processing out loud. That intimacy is what built her following. Her 2023 album “Good Riddance” earned real critical attention and locked in a fanbase that’s been paying close attention ever since.
Then Taylor Swift tapped her to open the Eras Tour, and the scale shifted entirely.
She went from headlining smaller venues to performing every night in front of massive arena crowds. Most of them had never heard of her. A lot of them figured it out fast. That kind of exposure doesn’t just lift streaming numbers. It reshapes the entire conversation around your next project. Abrams came out of that tour run with a significantly wider audience and a lot more eyes on every move she makes.
“Good Riddance” dropped in 2023. More than three years on, the appetite for new Gracie music has been building quietly. Wednesday’s BTS post gave that appetite something to latch onto.
That next move? LAML.
Phojoh is in the mix. The tag in a behind-the-scenes caption is a signal. Visual collaborators don’t usually get name-checked in a BTS post as a courtesy. Getting tagged there means the work is genuinely happening. The exact scope of phojoh’s role – direction, photography, or something broader – hasn’t been spelled out publicly.
What LAML stands for remains unclear. Album title, project name, a series of singles – none of it has been explained. Gracie dropped the acronym Wednesday and hasn’t added anything since. The mystery is holding, and she seems content to let it sit.
That’s the smart play. Abrams has spent the last few years earning real trust with her audience, and that trust is paying off now. She doesn’t need a full rollout to generate heat. A four-word caption with the right person tagged crossed six figures in likes and got her name moving across fan spaces without a single press release in sight.
The LAML era is underway. Whatever the move is, her people are already locked in.
