Whether that feeling is longing, unease, or a strange, shimmering hope, listeners and viewers can’t seem to look away. Emma Rose and Apollo New have built a cathedral out of broken electronics and whispered confessions. And the doors, for now, are open. Stay tuned for updates on the upcoming Null album and tour dates. Follow verified channels only—many impersonators exist.
Her breakout single, "Cobalt Hour," amassed over 2 million streams on Spotify—not through viral marketing, but via slow, organic discovery. Listeners described her voice as "a lullaby sung in an empty train station." Rose’s primary instruments are the harp and a heavily processed Fender Jazzmaster guitar, giving her sound a textural quality that defies easy categorization. emma rose and apollo new
As the duo themselves wrote in the only press release they’ve ever issued—a single sentence printed on a strip of thermal receipt paper: Whether that feeling is longing, unease, or a
Apollo New’s production style is instantly recognizable: heavy use of reverse reverb, bit-crushed percussion, and what he calls "ghost frequencies" (sub-bass tones that vibrate just below conscious perception). Critics have compared his work to a more organic version of Oneohtrix Point Never, but New cites his primary influence as "the sound of a hard drive failing during a thunderstorm." Stay tuned for updates on the upcoming Null