Artist's albums
City Planning (Remixes)
2023 · EP
City Limits (Robert Hood Remix)
2023 · single
MK 3.5: Die Cuts | City Planning
2022 · album
MK 3.5: Satellite 9 | dvd
2022 · single
dvd / Satellite 9
2022 · single
MK 3.5: F1 Racer & Locked In | Zone 1 (24 Hours)
2022 · single
MK 3.5: In Your Eyes & A Deities Encore | Q & Quartz
2022 · single
kissing / Quartz
2022 · single
AZD SURF
2022 · single
Black Stone / Blue Liquid
2021 · single
feel away (feat. James Blake & Mount Kimbie)
2020 · single
WXAXRXP Session
2019 · EP
You Look Certain (I’m Not So Sure) [WXAXRXP Session]
2019 · single
DJ-Kicks (Mount Kimbie) [DJ Mix]
2018 · album
Southgate
2018 · single
Love What Survives Remixes - Part 1
2018 · single
Love What Survives Remixes - Part 2
2018 · EP
Four Years and One Day (Gerd Janson Remix)
2018 · single
Four Years And One Day (Marcel Dettmann Remix)
2018 · single
Blue Train Lines (Nina Kraviz Main Mix)
2018 · single
Turtle Neck Man
2018 · single
Four Years and One Day
2017 · single
You Look Certain (I’m Not So Sure)
2017 · single
Love What Survives
2017 · album
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Biography
Mount Kimbie just keep evolving; they can’t do anything else. First they were young stars of the London electronic underground, turning the breakout success of a pair of EPs into a lasting album statement, 2010’s Crooks & Lovers. Later they were Warp-signed shapeshifters, changing coordinates across a pair of albums, between electronic duo and band, and between a rich constellation of influences. At each moment they could have stuck with a formula they knew worked. Instead they explored and experimented, looking for the next spark of inspiration and the freshest ideas. 13 years on, the search has brought them somewhere new. Over the past half decade the pair have taken parallel paths: Kai Campos dove deep into avant-garde club and DJ culture, while Dom Maker has been collaborating with world-renowned vocalists in the fertile LA scene. Kai’s story begins after the last Mount Kimbie album in 2017. The duo’s finest record yet, Love What Survives led to a period of extensive touring. Back home, he was hungry for a change of pace. He found it in DJing, which offered a new kind of performance - unplannable, unpredictable, and thrilling. Dom’s story, meanwhile, starts on the other side of the world. He moved to LA half a decade ago, around the same time as the band’s old friend and collaborator James Blake. The pair began doing production sessions with a series of increasingly big names from the world of rap and hip-hop.