Cole Lumpkin isn’t chasing the algorithm. He’s chasing honesty. Born and based in New York City, the multi-hyphenate artist is carving out a lane that feels refreshingly human in an era of over-polished drops and fast-burn trends. Music, for Lumpkin, isn’t about being loud or viral. It’s about being present.
A self-taught multi-instrumentalist, Cole does it all. He plays keys, drums, bass, and guitar, writes every lyric, produces his own tracks, and even handles his visuals. That DIY mindset started early, back when he was posting guitar covers on YouTube in high school. What began as experimentation slowly turned into confidence, and eventually into original releases that caught real attention. That momentum led to a deal with indie label Suite 484 and a distribution partnership with Sony Music’s The Orchard, all without him losing creative control.
His latest album, HELIX, dropped January 9 and feels like a diary you weren’t meant to read, but needed to. The project captures a year of heavy internal shifts: self-doubt, anxiety, emotional burnout, and growth happening in real time. Nothing feels dramatized or filtered. Every song
was written, produced, and composed by Cole himself, with one track produced by aurora.heaven and a single feature from Zach Denike. It’s intimate, intentional, and very him.
What makes HELIX hit different is how it was made. Cole didn’t wait for the perfect studio moment. He built the album everywhere. At home, on trains, in random Airbnbs, in the touring van while on the road with Cool Company. Songs were written between shows, revised in motion, and allowed to evolve as life happened around them. Once it all came together, he brought the final mix to Quad Studios in NYC, tying the chaos into something cohesive.
Sonically, HELIX expands on the progressive pop foundation of his debut OTHERWORLDS, but with more depth and less fear. It blends modern pop structures with subtle rock influence and emotional songwriting that doesn’t overshare, but doesn’t hide either. Tracks like “Where I Left Me” and “90 Degrees” stand out, though Cole admits his favorites change depending on where he’s at, which kind of says everything about the project.
Even the artwork is personal. Cole designed it himself, because for him, the visuals need to feel just as honest as the music. No fake personas. No forced aesthetics. Just alignment.
Cole Lumpkin’s version of success isn’t about numbers or hype cycles. It’s about staying real while moving forward. HELIX isn’t a flex. It’s a checkpoint. A snapshot of becoming. And in a time where everything feels rushed, his willingness to slow down and actually feel things might be the boldest move of all.