Alan Dreezer’s “Apart”: A Tender Look at Life’s Unspoken Divides

Alan Dreezer, a pop-soul singer from Eastbourne, East Sussex, just put out a powerful new song titled “Apart.” Alan has been making music for over 20 years, starting with groups like “Tara 2” and “AD Project.” He began his solo career in 2017, releasing albums like “LONDON E12” and “H E A L E D.” His past songs have earned him awards, with “BUTTERFLY” named “Best Pop Song of the Year” and “IT WAS YOU” winning “Song of the Year.” “Apart” continues his musical story, inviting us to think deeply about human connections.

The song is pop-soul, but it feels like a soft, modern slow jam. It starts very soft and light, perhaps with a piano or gentle music, which makes you feel calm and open. When the drums kick in, they’re super quiet, just there to keep the song going. Then the music slowly builds a bit, with soft string sounds adding warmth and feeling, but it never gets strong or noisy.

You’ll hear backing vocals gently added, which make the sound richer and almost dreamlike, strengthening the emotions in the song. Every sound has its own space, making the whole song feel big and wide, even though the main idea is very personal. This slow build lets you truly feel the changing emotions in the music.

His singing in “Apart” is the most important part of the song. His voice is both soft and very clear in showing feelings. He shows deep emotions through small changes in his voice, not by being loud. The singer has a calm yet powerful voice that also feels very gentle. It’s like he’s sharing a secret with you.

His voice flows easily from very soft whispers to slightly louder, soft parts, and each bit means a lot. The other voices singing along fit just right, helping his voice and making the feelings in the song even stronger. Throughout the song, his singing feels like he’s telling a personal secret, inviting you to be a quiet friend listening to a very personal thought.

Apart

The song “Apart” talks about the sad feeling when people slowly grow distant from someone they once loved. It’s not about fighting; it’s about the quiet, slow way two people move apart as their lives change. The song beautifully shows the quiet hurt when you realize this, even when you understand it’s happening or wish them well.

This song explores a common human feeling: how connections can slowly fade. It’s not about big arguments but about how things slowly break down when people don’t share their thoughts, don’t handle their emotions, and change over time. The song perfectly shows what it’s like to be standing right next to someone but feel very far away inside. It points out the little distances that can grow between people who used to be very close.

It’s not about blaming anyone or feeling bad; it’s a calm, adult way of looking at how life just changes and how those changes quietly make our most important connections different. The main message will really hit home for anyone who’s been in a relationship—like with a partner, friend, or family—where staying together stopped helping either person grow. It talks about the hard feeling inside of wanting to keep things how they were but also seeing the quiet, clear truth that things are different now and might not get better.

The song suggests a wise way of dealing with such a situation, accepting the end of a certain time in life with a gentle sadness and a fragile, yet clear, hope for the future—not necessarily for getting back together, but for personal calm and being true to oneself. It powerfully reminds us that sometimes, the most loving thing to do is to see when it’s time for paths to go different ways, even when the heart still feels a softness for what once was. It shows the quiet strength needed to accept such a parting, wishing only for comfort and true happiness for everyone involved, even as one steps into a future that is not clear and is spent alone.

In “Apart,” Alan Dreezer gives us a strong, emotional song that’s unique. It shows he’s very good at making music that sounds nice and feels true. It gives us a moving thought about people and how we quietly drift apart in life.

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