The comedown. A melancholic, ambient piece featuring the sound of water circling a drain. It fades in and out like a half-remembered dream. Fans believe this is Milkman’s most vulnerable writing to date.
Who are the Showerboys? This track offers no clarity. A choir of distorted, high-pitched voices chant “Wash away the sin / Let the steam begin” over a breakbeat that sounds like it was recorded in a public bathhouse in Berlin. It is the unifying chant for the growing cult following. Milkman presents showerboys vol 1
The centerpiece of Milkman presents Showerboys Vol 1. This track simulates the anxiety of the water suddenly turning ice cold. The BPM drops drastically. The synths become dissonant. It’s a masterclass in tension before the beat finally returns lukewarm and stumbling. The comedown
Milkman presents Showerboys Vol. 1 is more than an obscure joke release. It represents a deliberate aesthetic choice: finding beauty and meaning in awkward, unpolished, hyper-personal spaces. As streaming homogenizes sound, projects like this reclaim amateurism as a form of authenticity. Future volumes (Vol. 2 is rumored for late 2026) will test whether the concept can sustain itself without losing its accidental charm. At only 1:20, this interlude features a pitched-down,
At only 1:20, this interlude features a pitched-down, sultry R&B vocal whispering instructions on how to properly exfoliate, set to a lofi hip hop beat. It acts as the album’s strange, calming eye of the storm.
If this is a self-released project by an artist named Milkman (possibly a UK garage, bass, or electronic producer) or a DJ mix series, the term “Showerboys” could be a niche or humorous title.
Guide for listeners: