Dani Ivory Drops The Love Song Most People Are Too Scared To Write With “Get Through”
- Victoria Pfeifer

- 9 minutes ago
- 2 min read

There’s a huge difference between a love song and a real love song. Dani Ivory knows it. On “Get Through,” she doesn’t give us fairy tale devotion or toxic glamorization. She gives us the version where love is heavy, complicated, and still chosen anyway.
From the opening lines, she sets the tone with zero polish: “I really want to write a love song, but I can’t seem to get it right.” That’s the thesis. This isn’t about candlelight and perfect timing. It’s about loving someone who’s spiraling and admitting you’re not perfect either. When she sings, “I really want to tell you I miss you, but you’re drunk out of your mind,” it lands like a gut punch because it’s specific. And specificity is what makes it universal.
Vocally, Dani doesn’t oversell it. That restraint is powerful. Her tone carries emotional weight without theatrical overreach. You can hear her touring background in the control, but this feels intentionally stripped back. The production leans organic and grounded, reflecting the shift she’s making away from the ethereal pop and EDM textures of Dreamland into something more rooted in country storytelling. It feels closer. More human.
The chorus doesn’t offer escape. It offers commitment. “There’s no other way around it.” That line hits like someone deciding to stay when leaving would be easier. And then she turns the knife inward. “I wish I was stronger not to enable you, but I’m human too.” That’s where the song levels up. She doesn’t position herself as the savior. She acknowledges her own flaws. That mutual imperfection is the core of the track.
“Get Through” isn’t naive. It doesn’t promise that love fixes everything. It just honors the act of meeting in the middle. Of choosing someone even when it’s inconvenient and messy.
In a culture that either glorifies chaos or runs at the first sign of it, Dani Ivory is offering something braver: accountability, empathy, and the quiet strength of staying.


