Matt Dunne releases “Lonely” under his Specific Coast moniker right before Thanksgiving, which feels deliberate. The LA songwriter knows exactly what he’s doing here.
The track opens with delicate acoustics that feels like early morning light, soft, but insistent. Dunne’s vocals sit right in that sweet spot where they sound conversational without losing their punch.
Guitar fingerpicking and piano chords flourish, not to show off but to give the song somewhere to go.
What makes “Lonely” work is how Dunne flips the script on isolation. He’s not wallowing. Those solo walks with headphones? He frames them as necessary maintenance, not symptoms of something broken. It’s the musical equivalent of saying “I’m not antisocial, I’m selectively social.”
The bridge hits different though, showing a new perspective. Dunne admits he cries thinking about someone, then catches himself smiling mid-tears.
That shift from sad to oddly content? That’s the real story here. He also touches on something most thirty-somethings won’t say out loud: the fear that your old friends wouldn’t recognise who you’ve become.
Musically, Dunne keeps things stripped down until he doesn’t. The arrangement builds just enough to match the emotional weight without turning into something overwrought. It’s restrained in the best way.
“Lonely” isn’t breaking new ground sonically, but it doesn’t need to. Dunne writes the kind of folk song that makes you text someone you haven’t talked to in years, or maybe just sit with your own thoughts for a while. Both responses feel right.
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