Third World Summer / Love in Athens drops tomorrow, May 3!
links
Third World Summer, the new electronic project from Seattle-based artist Allan Lumba, is now officially part of Number Line Records!
This song is gonna be your summer anthem. Out soon as half of a split single with Love in Athens!
Check out the preview video shot by Canadian cinematographer Marty Mellway.
Teaser video for Tokwa Penaflorida & Soleil Ignacio’s collaboration for their Hello Sailor exhibit at Heima Cubao X on April 14, 2012
Music by Tarsius (feat. Slow Hello), remixed by Similar Objects.
Video: Fold Canela
Assisted by: Eldzs Mejia and Chi Jihan
Thursday Room, April 2012
Outerhope is playing at the NYC Popfest this May. Lots of awesome people in Manila and New York are helping out and making this happen. Like blanc gallery, which is hosting a one-night art show featuring works by Mariano Ching, Yasmin Sison, Ernest Concepcion, Zeus Bascon, Tof Zapanta, Zean Cabangis, Dex Fernandez, Lena Cobangbang, MM Yu, Luis Antonio Santos, and Carina Samantha Santos. That’s a pretty amazing line-up. So much love in Manila.
Previously:
NEW RELEASE!
Following his remix of Outerhope’s “The Man with the Pipes,” monome artist Joon Guillen—aka Modulogeek—wrote five other tracks around it, each shifting in mood and key. The result is Pipes and Palindromes, a conceptual EP loosely structured to flow like the score of a musical, with reprises and recurring themes. The EP both builds on and departs from Modulogeek’s previous work. It contains standout tracks such as “Do Undo,” where Guillen introduces a heavier, dancier version of Modulogeek, as well as more familiar songs such as “3.14,” which showcases Guillen’s skill in creating machinic soundscapes that are simultaneously whimsical and melancholic.
Download the full EP for FREE:
Preview video for the new Modulogeek EP, Pipes and Palindromes. Drops on March 14!
Multo - Hallelujah and All Those Things
Did you miss this release?
“Upon Returning/Hallelujah and All Those Things” is the second release under Number Line Records by Allan Lumba, a.k.a. Multo. While representing a bit of a departure from the stripped-down, guitar-based pop of his earlier work, they are similarly characterized by carefully considered words and beguiling tunes. “There really isn’t anything that ties together these two songs, except maybe they are conceptually two of the more ‘hopeful’ themed songs I’ve made,” says Allan. Both songs are taken from his forthcoming first full-length album Dead Stars, which he predicts will be “More lush, layered, somber, drawn-out, and ultimately more nuanced than [debut EP] Footnote to Youth.”