TOMORA Announce Debut Album COME CLOSER, Share Title Track and New Video

Photo courtesy of Interscope Capitol
Coachella’s 2026 lineup had one name that read like a typo with intent: TOMORA. No explanation, no rollout campaign, just a new act dropped into the poster like a dare. Now the curtain’s been pulled back — and the pairing is instantly headline-worthy.
TOMORA is the new duo of The Chemical Brothers’ Tom Rowlands and AURORA, a collaboration that doesn’t so much “blend styles” as it detonates them. Rowlands brings decades of electronic precision and rave-bred muscle; AURORA arrives with a voice that feels otherworldly, emotional, and slightly unhinged in the best way. Together, they don’t chase a middle ground — they build a new one.
The duo has announced their debut album, COME CLOSER, out April 17 via Capitol Records, and they’re not easing into it. The title track is out now, arriving with an official music video directed by Adam Smith and S T A R T !, delivering the first real glimpse of TOMORA’s world: sleek, cinematic, and buzzing with electricity.
This follows December’s “RING THE ALARM,” the project’s first shot fired — a high-octane track that drew early praise from SPIN, BrooklynVegan, and Stereogum, who called it a ride along the edge of euphoria and panic. Accurate. It hits like a siren in a packed room. DJs quickly followed, with support from names like Erol Alkan and ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U, while a limited white label vinyl release paired the track with “THE THING,” a softer, more tender counterweight that hinted TOMORA has more range than pure club chaos.
If “RING THE ALARM” was the warning, “COME CLOSER” is the invitation — and the album promises to go even further. The 12-track record is described as a collision of eras, pulling from psychedelic past and future-facing electronic extremes, as if someone fed a perfect record collection into a machine and let it mutate.
In a music landscape increasingly engineered for playlists and predictability, TOMORA feels refreshingly reckless. Not a marketing experiment. Not a novelty link-up. Just two artists pushing each other into something louder, stranger, and more alive.
COME CLOSER lands April 17. Until then, the transmission is already playing.



















































































































































