College returns with its third full length album, a rich, glowing and nostalgic synth-based offering reminiscent of previous works heard in ‘A Real Hero’ (Drive Soundtrack), but at the same time exploring a unique and conceptual world, ‘Shanghai’, giving College’s textural and atmospherical works a brand new dimension.

This is available on gold vinyl, complete with digital download card. The record comes housed in a deluxe spined sleeve with beautiful gold foil lettering.

The CD is presented as a digipack CD.

Shanghai is an album inspired by the city itself - its culture and architecture; how it is a melting pot of many things. Musically he draws on 90's sounds and the work from artists including Mark Snow, Angelo Badalamenti, Joe Hisaishi and Aphex Twin.

On the record, Grellier explains:

"This record is a mysterious ballad in the heart of 1920s Shanghai... An invitation to travel, a tribute to the refinement and in the delicacy of a fantasized and blurry period of time, which fed the imagination of the musicians, the artists and the architects of this mythical city. Young chinese singer Hama, a Shanghai native, also honors me by singing on the title 'Love Peas'. The keys of this new adventure is in your hands."

TRACKLIST

1. A Strange Guide

2. Bloody Palms

3. Hotel Theme Part I

4. Love Peas (feat Hama)

5. Mister Fang

6. Is It Time

7. Typhoon Alert

8. Briefcase

9. Elizabeth Monterey

10. Mansion Road

11. Next To The River

12. Hotel Theme Part II

13. Lipstick

14. The Airport

15. 8

College is David Grellier; a French electronic music composer, born in 1979 in Nantes. In the late '90s he acquired his first computer with which he produced several demos influenced by artists such as Jeff Mills and Aphex Twin, and labels such as Soma Records, Peacefrog and Warp. In 2007 he started Valerie; a blog that has evolved to become a record label and an expanding cultural network of international artists. 2011 saw Nicolas Winding Refn chose 'A Real Hero' by College feat. Electric Youth as the theme song for his acclaimed and award-winning film Drive, propelling College into mainstream consciousness and securing him support across publications such as Pitchfork, Consequence of Sound and The Line of Best Fit.