“I Don't Miss That Woman” - Wattmore
Photo Credit: Artist EPK
Let’s be honest — the world doesn’t need another sad breakup song. But what it does need is a breakup song that doesn’t wallow, doesn’t sugarcoat, and doesn’t pretend like we haven’t all fantasized about driving off into the sunset with a middle finger in the rearview mirror. And on that front, Brisbane’s favorite brotherly duo Wattmore delivers hard.
Their new single, “I Don’t Miss That Woman”, dropped today, and it’s a scorched-earth kind of sendoff — gritty, twangy, and unbothered in all the right ways. It’s not a ballad. It’s not a sob story. It’s a drive-fast-with-the-windows-down-and-don’t-look-back anthem. If your heartbreak had a CB radio and a steel bumper, this would be its theme song.
Wattmore — the brother duo known for equal parts sass and steel — team up with Aussie songwriting royalty Allan Caswell for this one, and the result is as clever as it is cathartic. You can practically hear the grin behind the lyrics, that “yeah, I’ve moved on — and good riddance” kind of confidence that comes only after a solid cry, a lot of miles, and maybe a new tattoo.
Right from the first line, you know what you’re in for. This isn’t a song trying to win anyone back — it’s a song about finally not caring. The guitars growl, the rhythm section stomps, and the vocal delivery? Equal parts deadpan and deadly accurate. It’s sarcastic, it’s dry, it’s painfully real — and, let’s face it, sometimes that’s exactly what you need when you’re trying to get over someone who wasn’t worth the fuel in your tank.
And speaking of fuel — let’s talk sound. Producer Lindsay Waddington has rounded up a crew of Aussie pickers and players that feel more like outlaws than studio musicians. The tone is pure country-rock attitude with a dash of garage grit. The guitar riffs are sharp and punchy, like a honky-tonk got sideswiped by a diesel-powered revenge fantasy. The percussion doesn’t tap politely — it kicks the door open and starts packing boxes.
Photo Credit: Artist EPK
But it’s not just about sound. It’s about style, and Wattmore has that in spades. These guys aren’t trying to be polished pop stars — they’re blokes who grew up with engine grease on their jeans and sarcasm in their DNA. Raised in a trucking family, their music comes with that no-nonsense, side-eye honesty that doesn’t care much for pretense. They don’t whine, they don’t beg — they just play the hell out of their instruments and tell the truth with a wink.
And that truth? It’s that sometimes the healthiest thing you can do after a relationship is to throw your feelings in the back, start the engine, and go. No looking back. No poetic metaphors. Just straight-up, brutally fun closure.
Whether you’re freshly dumped, over it completely, or just love a damn good country-rock track, “I Don’t Miss That Woman” has something for you. It's catharsis on wheels. It's that knowing smirk you give when someone asks if you’re okay and you say, “Never better.” It's the truck, the ex, the emotional dust storm — all rolled into three-and-a-half minutes of perfectly measured chaos.
So crank it up. Roll down the windows. And if you happen to mouth the words “I don’t miss that woman” a little louder than necessary — don’t worry. We’ve all been there.
Wattmore just put it to music.
“I Don't Miss That Woman” is available now on all major streaming platforms