Gabriel Audee: The Artist From Colorado Who Decided Pop Music Should Tell the Truth
- Flex Admin
- Apr 30
- 2 min read
Gabriel Audee didn’t grow up with an easy route into music. From a small-town Colorado, he found his language early - beats on a computer, paint on a canvas, songs written long before anyone else was listening. The creativity wasn’t a hobby. It was survival. And somewhere in those years of building sonic worlds alone, a philosophy took shape that still drives everything he makes: every song is a true story.
Fast forward to 2026, and Gabriel Audee is operating out of New York City, sitting on a debut LP titled ‘Pop Architect’ and releasing what may be his most fully realised single to date. ‘DICHOTOMY (The Chosen Ones)’ - featuring vocalist Saule Ilona Vaida and rapper Lil Dee - is a cinematic pop-trap anthem that arrives at a cultural moment seemingly built for it. Gabriel Audee has been vocal on social media about the things most artists carefully avoid: the Epstein files, Hollywood, hidden agendas. Where others hedge, he posts. Where others sanitise, he sharpens.
What makes Gabriel Audee genuinely interesting isn’t the controversy … it’s the conviction. He describes ‘DICHOTOMY (The Chosen Ones)’ as a chant anthem for those who pierce the veil, and that’s not marketing language. It’s the same instinct that kept a gay kid in Colorado making music when the world around him wasn’t particularly interested in what he had to say. The details have changed. The urgency hasn’t.
He doesn’t sing on his own records. He writes them, produces them, mixes them, and hands them to voices that can carry the weight. “I don’t sing - I design the feeling,” he says, and ‘DICHOTOMY (The Chosen Ones)’ is that process at its most deliberate; every guitar line, every synth pad, every drum hit placed by a man who has been building towards this moment since he was thirteen years old and FL Studio was his first love.




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