Gus Dapperton captivated audiences with his indie-pop edge on his 2019 debut album Where Polly Goes To Read. After touring the world behind the album, the NYC-based musician is translating all he’s ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Gus Dapperton has reunited with his bandmates to perform his newest single "Post ...
Five years ago, Benee and Gus Dapperton had a COVID-summer hit with the topically appropriate “Supalonely.” This month, the two singers have covered the New Radicals’ ’90s hit “You Get What You Give” ...
Singer-songwriter Gus Dapperton is putting a fresh spin on a classic track as part of a new campaign for the mall brand, Journeys. Out today, Journeys’ “Life on Loud” campaign taps Dapperton for a ...
Gus Dapperton’s sophomore album “Orca,” a follow-up to his 2019 debut release “Where The Polly People Go,” melds the artist’s sonic development with reflective and candid lyricism. (Photo courtesy of ...
No stranger to indie and alternative music scenes, Gus Dapperton is difficult to define. That’s on purpose. His music is defined by its inability to fit into a specific box, sprawling instead across a ...
The 4-song set includes a stunning update of Wham!’s 1984 hit “Everything She Wants” as well as his recent reinventions of Cher’s seminal “Believe” and Bobby Caldwell's evergreen “What You Won’t Do ...
Gus Dapperton started sprinting. It was the fall of 2020, at the tail end of an all-night, chaotic adventure that would only happen in New York City, when he got off the train in Brooklyn and was met ...
Gus Dapperton isn’t about the facade that musicians — or anyone famous, really — are superheroes. And like everyone else, they deal with mental health issues. “[Musicians] are usually afraid to ...
Currently Lives: With his parents in Long Branch, New Jersey, where he can focus on making music. Claim to Fame: Dapperton is a musician, songwriter, producer and designer known for his youthful, ’90s ...
Gus Dapperton isn’t about the facade that musicians — or anyone famous, really — are superheroes. And like everyone else, they deal with mental health issues. “[Musicians] are usually afraid to ...