Music / NewsMusic / NewsWolfgang Tillmans releases new single ‘Life Guarding’The photographer and artist returns to music with a track based around waterShareLink copied ✔️August 21, 2020August 21, 2020TextSelim Bulut Wolfgang Tillmans has released a new track, “Life Guarding”. “Life Guarding” is based around water metaphors, both in the track’s lyrics and in its visuals. Its music video is a film and collage by Tillmans, edited by Michael Amstad, that explores shifts its lens “between micro and macrocosms, collages of body parts, fruit and insects, we find him equally paying attention to the waves of the Atlantic Ocean as well as to the ‘same’ water in the form of drops, evaporating on a hot kitchen plate”, a press release reads. Though Tillmans is a renowned photographer and artist, he is no stranger to music. He has released a handful of EPs since 2016 under his own name and with the group Fragile, and in 2018 worked with UK experimental producer Powell on the Spoken by the Other EP. Most notably, his track “Device Control” bookended Frank Ocean’s 2016 visual album Endless. “Life Guarding” was written by Tillmans with collaborators Tim Knapp and Jay Pluck in early 2019 at Trixx Studios in Berlin, and later produced with Tim Knapp and Bruno Breitzke. The track is part of a double A-side 12”, alongside the track “Growing”, and is also the first glance at an upcoming album by Tillmans. Listen below. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORECorridos tumbados: A guide to Mexico’s most controversial music genreSekou is the 21-year-old baritone making 70s soul cool againDon’t Be Dumb: The top 5 features on A$AP Rocky’s new album The rise of ‘Britainicana’: How Westside Cowboy are reshaping UK indieR!R!Riot is Taiwan’s pluggnb princessWhen did UK underground rap get so Christian? Why listening parties are everywhere right nowA night out with Feng, the ‘positive punk’ of UK UgDoppel-gäng gäng gäng: 7 times artists used body doublesWesley Joseph is the Marty Supreme of R&B (only nicer) How Turnstile are reinventing hardcore for the internet ageWill these be the biggest musical moments of 2026?