The Philippine Star

No rome joins the 1975 show on sept. 11 at Moa

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Concert promoter MMI Live has announced that global young talent No

Rome (photo) will join The 1975 in their concert tomorrow, Sept. 11, at the SM Mall of Asia (MOA) Arena.

Born and raised in Manila, Rome Gomez — better known as No Rome — is a London-based Filipino musician. The 24-year-old artist debuted with the single

Narcissist, which features vocals and production from Dirty Hit Records labelmates Matty Healy and George Daniel of The 1975. The song is a single off No Rome’s EP RIP Indo Hisashi, which was released in August last year.

In 2019, No Rome released his second and selfproduc­ed EP, Crying in the Prettiest Places, with the acclaimed returning track, Cashmoney. Across the six tracks of Crying in the Prettiest Places, No Rome showcases as much sonic playfulnes­s as he does raw lyrical honesty with unique, affecting results.

Born in a tough Manila neighborho­od, Rome grew up keeping one eye over his shoulder. “I grew up in such a dark, dark street,” he says. He stresses that this isn’t the experience of all Filipinos. “That’s the street I was in,” he says. “I’m not generalizi­ng the Philippine­s.”

But Rome refused to live in fear of bullies. As an emo kid who’d wear skinny jeans and tight T-shirts, he started learning self-defense to protect himself. For a while he’d get into fights, but then his dad started teaching Rome the basics of music production software at 12 years old. “Making music made me get so obsessed with it,” he says. “I was super into hip-hop and obsessed with J Dilla and Nujabes.” His genre-blind early taste spanned Slipknot to 2Pac, and the New Order and David Bowie records that found in his dad’s stacks of vinyl.

By his mid-teens, Rome had moved on to shoegaze bands like My Bloody Valentine and Slowdive, eventually finding a niche in “shoegaze R&B” that he continues to explore. His early Soundcloud demos picked up attention from the likes of Ryan Hemsworth, members of Brockhampt­on and — eventually — collaborat­or and friend Matt.

“We both (Healy and I) make a genre-bending type of pop music,” Rome says, “We get inspired from places that you wouldn’t expect.” It follows, then, that Crying In The Prettiest Places is vividly strewn with sonic curveballs. Take opening screamo-pop anthem 5 Ways To Bleach Your Hair, or EP highlight Stoned In The Valley — a breezy skatepark anthem that hybridizes millennium-era pop-punk sounds with a modern emo-rap.

“That’s the shit I grew up on,” says Rome of pop punk. “That’s my Nirvana: Box Car Racer, Blink-182 and New Found Glory. I wanted to reference nostalgia, but (to be) more modern lyrically and a bit darker.”

No Rome recently made his Coachella debut alongside The 1975 and even touted as the first Filipino artist to ever perform in the biggest annual music and arts festival.

No Rome is also expected to return to Manila and will be performing on Oct. 6 at the Market! Market! Activity Center. For details, follow MMI Live (on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) or visit mmilive.com.

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