Bronnie steps into a more reflective space on ‘Sedona Sunrise’, a new single arriving on 5th June 2026 and shaped by gratitude, growth and the kind of perspective that only really arrives when life slows down enough for you to notice it. Rather than chasing drama, the song is built around presence: looking around, breathing properly and recognising how much beauty exists in the in-between moments if you let yourself actually see them.
That gives ‘Sedona Sunrise’ a lovely emotional centre. It is framed as a song about stepping into independence, trusting the process and understanding that life can begin to stretch wider than you once imagined. There is a real sense of movement in that idea, but it is not restless movement. This feels more like the kind of personal shift that happens quietly, then all at once, when you suddenly realise you are standing somewhere new in yourself.
A song rooted in gratitude and open space
The strongest thing about the concept is that Bronnie does not seem interested in overselling it. ‘Sedona Sunrise’ is about hard work, patience and trust, but it approaches those ideas with warmth rather than self-importance. It reflects a season of growth without turning that growth into some giant declaration. Instead, the song seems to find its power in smaller, more human things: pausing, noticing, letting the moment find you and understanding that sometimes that is enough.
There is also something very appealing in the imagery around it. The title alone opens up a whole landscape of freedom, distance and possibility, and that western visual framing suits the song’s themes well. The release notes describe the feeling of watching the sun rise somewhere new and realising that everything has led you there. It is a simple image, but an effective one, because it ties together reflection, gratitude and the quiet confidence of starting again.
Written by Bronnie and Chris Mitchell, with production from Peter Gebbie and mix and master by Andy Shaw, ‘Sedona Sunrise’ presents itself as a song with a clear emotional purpose. It wants to offer calm rather than chaos, and perspective rather than pressure. That makes it feel like a release with its own kind of confidence: not loud, not flashy, just sure of what it wants to say and how it wants to leave you feeling once it is over.
You can pre-save ‘Sedona Sunrise’ here and follow Bronnie on Instagram.
