Sometimes, music isn’t written — it’s remembered. That’s how it felt when Prep, those slick London craftsmen with hearts tuned to analog soul and satin-soft FM radio, found themselves in a studio with Eddie Chacon, the survivor saint of slow jams and sweet ruin. The match was no accident. After hearing Holy Hell, Prep felt the pull — something spiritual, something shared.

They met in L.A., threw rhythm into the room like dice, and in a single afternoon — no tension, no ego — Call It happened. Synths hummed. A sitar buzzed gently. And somewhere inside that moment, past and present stopped arguing.

The result? A track that’s part Georgy Porgy, part always was.

Add to that: Turbotito, one of L.A.’s quiet conjurors, stepping in for a remix smoother than blended velvet. As you’ve already gathered, we’re in for something rare and unique with The Sunset Manifesto.

I’ve zoomed in for the upcoming release of The Sunset Manifesto 2 which you can be sure to catch here as soon as more is out.

Links:

Too Slow To Disco

Prep:

Find them on InstagramFacebookTwitter (X)SoundCloud, and through their Linktree.

Eddie Chacon:

Follow Eddie on InstagramFacebookTwitter (X), visit his official website, or explore his work at Stones Throw Records.

The Sunset Manifesto on Discoanon

Turbotito

Discoholics Anonymous doesn’t ask for cookies. It slips them into your pocket while you’re not looking, the way clubs used to slip flyers into your coat lining at 4:37 in the morning. Some of them are harmless — the house keys. They keep the lights on, remember who you are, stop the whole thing collapsing when you hit refresh. Without them the site is just a room with no door. The others are curious little spies. They want to know which mixes you stayed for, which ones you ghosted, whether you