Manuel De Lorenzi and Paul Dc have released a new three-track EP titled Marynbow on Monday Morning Records, out May 29, 2026. The release leans into deep tech and minimal pressure, built around analog grit and functional groove rather than surface-level production polish.
De Lorenzi and Paul Dc are co-founders of Monday Morning Records, a label they have run together since 2013. Both producers have also collaborated under the Usual Things Around name alongside Sami, building a catalog of vinyl and digital releases that has helped define the label’s sound over more than a decade. That shared history is audible across Marynbow, where the tracks carry the ease of two producers working inside a well-established creative relationship.
The EP opens with the title track, which centers on a rolling bassline and tight percussion. The textures shift slowly and the groove settles without flash, giving the track a late-night quality suited to holding a room steady over an extended stretch. Nothing reaches for a bigger hook than the rhythm itself needs.
„I’m Sexy“ introduces a funkier edge to the release while staying stripped back. The drums remain dry and the groove pushes forward with a playful quality that keeps the track from feeling overly austere. It carries a warehouse sensibility where small rhythmic shifts carry weight when the sound system is right.
„Pump“ is the most direct of the three. Built around low-end focus and a tight rhythmic feel, it is designed for pressure and sits naturally deeper in a set. The track does not complicate the idea — it keeps the room moving and leaves it at that.
De Lorenzi’s background spans early production work in Castelfidardo through international club residencies and an extensive discography. Paul Dc’s connection to vinyl culture and Italy’s underground scene adds further grounding to the EP’s sound. Together, those histories give Marynbow a clear sense of origin — music shaped by time spent around records, rooms, and sound systems rather than constructed for a particular moment.
Across all three tracks, the production keeps its edges intact. The analog warmth present throughout the EP feels like a natural part of how De Lorenzi and Paul Dc approach the music rather than an aesthetic choice applied after the fact. The result is a release that stays close to Monday Morning Records‘ established sound while still feeling deliberate and complete as a standalone package.
Source: Magnetic Magazine


