Manuel De Lorenzi and Paul Dc’s “Marynbow” sounds like a record made by two producers who know how much can happen when the drums, bass, and small textural details are all pulling in the same direction.

The EP came out on Monday Morning Records on May 29, 2026, and it keeps the focus on deep tech, minimal pressure, and the kind of analog grit that feels useful in a real room rather than dressed up for a press paragraph.

That history matters here. De Lorenzi and Paul Dc are co-founders of Monday Morning Records, and the label has been part of their shared creative life since 2013. They have also worked with Sami under the Usual Things Around name, building a catalog of vinyl and digital releases that helped shape the label’s sound.

You can hear that long relationship across the EP because none of these tracks feel like someone trying to prove a point. “Marynbow,” “I’m Sexy,” and “Pump” are all built around groove, pressure, and small shifts inside the rhythm. The tracks stay stripped back, but they never feel thin, which is usually where this kind of deep tech record either connects or falls flat.

Three Tracks, No Wasted Motion

The title track opens the EP with a rolling bassline and a groove that settles in without much flash. The textures move slowly, the percussion stays tight, and the track has that middle-of-the-night feel where the DJ can hold the room in one place for a while without needing to reach for a bigger hook.

“I’m Sexy” brings a little funkier attitude into the release. It is still stripped back, but there is a playful edge in the movement, and that keeps the track from feeling too serious. The groove pushes forward, the drums stay dry, and the whole thing has that warehouse quality where a small rhythmic change can shift the whole room if the system is right.

“Pump” is the most direct of the three, and the title pretty much tells you what the track is there to do. It is built for pressure, with a low-end focus and a tight rhythmic feel that should make it easy to place deeper into a set. It does not overthink the idea. It just keeps the room moving.

Monday Morning Records Stays Close To Its Roots

The best thing about this EP is how little it tries to soften the edges. De Lorenzi and Paul Dc keep the sound raw, but there is still enough control in the production to make the tracks feel deliberate. The analog warmth is there, but it is not being used as a costume. It feels like part of how these two producers actually hear this music.

That makes sense when you look at their backgrounds. De Lorenzi’s path runs from early production work in Castelfidardo through international club residencies and a long discography, while Paul Dc’s connection to vinyl culture and Italy’s underground scene gives the EP a clear sense of where it comes from. This is music built by people who have spent time around records, rooms, and systems, and that comes through in the pacing.

“Marynbow” gives Monday Morning Records a three-track release that stays close to the label’s core sound without feeling like a repeat of old material. It is gritty, functional, and focused, with enough personality in each track to make the package feel complete.

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Will Vance is a professional music producer who has been involved in the industry for the better part of a decade and has been the managing editor at Magnetic Magazine since mid-2022. In that time period, he has published thousands of articles on music production, industry think pieces and educational articles about the music industry. Over the last decade as a professional music producer, Will Vance has also ran multiple successful and highly respected record labels in the industry, including Where The Heart Is Records as well as having launched a new label with a focus on community through Magnetic Magazine. When not running these labels or producing his own music, Vance is likely writing for other top industry sites like Waves or the Hyperbits Masterclass or working on his upcoming book on mindfulness in music production. On the rare chance he's not thinking about music production, he's probably running a game of Dungeons and Dragons with his friends which he has been the dungeon master for for many years.