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Supalonely ft Gus Dapperton by BENEE Chords and Melody
About The Key Of G Major
Supalonely ft Gus Dapperton is written in the key of G Major. According to the Theorytab database, it is the 3rd most popular key among Major keys and the 3rd most popular among all keys. Major keys, along with low keys, are a common choice for popular songs. The three most crucial chords, built off the 1st, 4th and 5th scale degrees are all major chords (G Major, C Major, and D Major). See the G Major Cheat Sheet for popular chords, chord progressions, downloadable midi files and more!
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As we’re continuing the strife to uncover a new “normal,” we can’t help but settle in the uncertainty that these past few years have left us floating within. So much has happened and so much has changed all from behind the confines of the four walls that we call home. For the moments when the sky feels like it's falling and you need someplace to plant your feet, the San Diego-raised artist Jelani Aryeh offers his latest drop, “From These Heights."
Uniquely its own entity, "From These Heights" both separates itself from modern tune and sows new roots for the music of the future in a quick 3-minute go. Aryeh reorients early 2000s indie rock to suit our time of require. Featuring existential lyricism and that good ole’ stripped-down garage band sound, this gem channels the energy of music in the past to invoke worldwide modify for the future.
Aryeh began crafting this track during the pandemic, at the height of civil unrest, sharing on his Instagram: “I made this song with Alex Craig of Slaters last May...George Floyd had just been murdered, and the riots were just starting to take place. It felt like there was so much chaos + uncertainty in the air a
Gus Dapperton Grows Up
You experience his soul when he sings, which is all the more remarkable considering, as of last year, Gus was still a student at Philadelphia’s Drexel University studying music technology, recording songs in his dorm room.
His new collection of songs, of which “Prune” is the first piece, differs from August’s Yellow and Such in its commitment to inhabit instrumentation instead of analog. But the subject matter, says Gus, is the same: “It’s a prolongation of the last undertaking, which is basically heartache and heartbreak,” he tells me, smiling wryly.
Glasses by RetroSuperFuture
Gus’s image is so curated that, to someone unfamiliar with his harmony, it runs the peril of feeling inauthentic. He only has six songs to his name. His music videos are mini works of art; his clothes are immaculately chosen; his hair is trimmed to a perfect bowl chop, balanced out by vintage, oversized yellow glasses. It all feels too precious, sometimes.
But this response to Gus’s art misses the point: in a generation hooked on instant gratification, Gus is obsessed with detail, and is staunchly sincere. He never rushes his art; “Prune” took a year to write, he
Gus Dapperton is just 22 years aged. You have to remind yourself of this when you meet him, because he speaks with a wisdom that is beyond his years.
When we discuss, the American singer and songwriter is touring the UK ahead of the release of his first album. This might seem appreciate a daunting prospect, particularly given his age, but Dapperton insists this isn’t the case. “I’ve been making melody for ten years,” he says. “Only in the last year have people been listening to it, so for me it was like: finally. It’s been a elongated time coming.”
Dapperton’s first taste of triumph came via online fame when the videos for two of his songs – I’m Just Snacking and Prune, You Talk Funny – went viral on YouTube. Since then, with millions following him, watching his videos and listening to his songs, Dapperton has been on the road. His debut album, Where Polly People Go To Read is a diary of the last year of his life as he has simultaneously navigated the earth (quite literally, through his travels) and romantic relationships.
Dapperton writes songs for his own mental wellbeing. “If I couldn’t make music I think I’d spontaneously combust because I have so many emotions inside me,” he s