Delete Ya
by Djo

Album: The Crux (2025)
Charted: 74
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Songfacts®:

  • In "Delete Ya," Djo (the musical project of Stranger Things star Joe Keery) reminisces on a life he used to live with a past loved one. He is stuck in the uncomfortable middle ground between wanting to erase someone completely and realizing that the human brain, unlike a laptop, does not come with a reliable delete key. You can wish a person gone, but your feelings didn't get the memo.

    "It's a song about love, this song is about heartbreak, and it's a song about letting go," Keery told BBC Radio 1's Jack Saunders.
  • "Delete Ya" is built from small, ordinary moments - late flights, walks through Hollywood, an old apartment, time spent with an ex's family - the kind of unremarkable scenes that become emotionally radioactive once a relationship ends.
  • Keery said the song is rooted in Los Angeles, a city he associates with a specific chapter of his life. "I kind of mark my life and time by places that I've spent a lot of time in," he explained, noting that LA means something different to him now than it once did.
  • Keery briefly widens the lens, namechecking Charlie Heaton, Keery's Stranger Things co-star (he plays Jonathan Byers) and longtime friend.

    Blue and gold Friday night
    Team up with Charlie, take these kids for a ride


    It's a reference to the times they would go on drives with their younger co-stars. Keery also wrote the song "Charlie's Garden" about their friendship.
  • Keery wrote and produced the song with his frequent collaborator Adam Thein at Electric Lady Studios in New York City for his third album, The Crux. It leans into a warm, mid-tempo soft-rock groove with a distinctly 1980s sheen: ringing guitars, nostalgia baked into the chords. Keery cited Prince's guitar work and the wistful moodiness of The Police as touchstones, describing the song as part of a larger emotional framework on The Crux. "'Delete' is one side of the coin," he told Saunders. "This is kind of the other side of it. 'Basic' is the other."
  • The album's cover image, featuring Keery dangling out of a window, wasn't a label concept but a suggestion from his friend Jake, which Keery accepted "for dear life," in both a literal and thematic sense.
  • Keery hasn't confirmed that "Delete Ya" is about any particular person. He's described The Crux as a kind of personal journal, a place to process experiences rather than name names.

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