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Gus Dapperton has always been obsessed with building new worlds. It's been part of his passion since he started making songs in Garageband, a creator's mindset that eventually shaped two independent albums of defiantly original alt-pop.

Dapperton's love of sonic world-building has deep roots. The Warwick, New York native didn't grow up in a traditionally musical family, but there was always something blasting from the radio. As much as he loved music, he didn't think he would ever make his own: "I tried picking up the guitar," he remembers. "It didn't really stick." An eighth-grade music class changed all that. Students were tasked with making a song in GarageBand -- and Dapperton had found his instrument.

Dapperton spent the rest of high school making beats. By the time college came around, his confidence had blossomed. "I started picking up instruments and singing," he says. While attending Drexel University, he played gigs in Philadelphia and ventured to New York City with just his "computer, an MPD pad, and a guitar." He soon dropped out and released a series of independent EPs as well as the acclaimed albums Where Polly People Go to Read and Orca. With buzz brewing, a feel-good feature would be his breakthrough.

"Supalonely," a collaboration with New Zealand singer-songwriter BENEE, went viral during lockdown in 2020 and amassed more than one billion streams on its way to becoming a double-Platinum hit. "It gave me and other indie artists credibility," he says. "It showed that alt-pop songs can be massive."

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