Bahrain-based artist Sean Aaron Fernandes is set to release The Cinematic Death of Man, a four-track EP under his Byculla Video Club (BVC) project, tomorrow, January 30, marking its first formal EP release with a defined track order.

Despite its dramatic title, the EP is rooted in something far quieter and more personal – rather than signalling collapse or reinvention, it centres on ego death, loss of confidence and self-belief, and the uncomfortable process of acknowledging that state instead of masking it.

“It’s really about ego death,” Sean told GulfWeekly.

“Losing confidence, self-belief, and sitting with that uncomfortable phase instead of pretending it’s not happening.

“It’s less ‘end of the world’ and more ‘okay, this is happening, let’s deal with it.’”

That inward focus shapes the structure of the EP, which moves deliberately through longing, fear of failure, acceptance, and eventual growth.

BVC embraced a fluid approach to genre and release strategy, with songs often arriving without narrative obligation or stylistic continuity, however, unlike previous releases, which were mostly standalone entries in a larger archive, the tracks on this EP were designed to be heard in sequence.

“These songs needed to live in a specific order,” Sean explained.

“The random access idea is still very much alive – it just took a short, organised break.”

Two previously released tracks, Margao and Will She?, act as the emotional anchors for the EP.

The EP also introduces two new tracks – Coping Mechanism is an instrumental inspired by 1960s pop, with subtle synth textures and a trace of dub influence, and A Hymn for No One, the shortest track on the EP, is an interlude with stacked vocals, Indian percussion, and a choral, reverb-heavy atmosphere.

“The EP’s whole idea is that you actually have the power to let yourself out of your own mental prison even if you keep forgetting that,” Sean added.

“It flows through longing, fear of failure, acceptance, and eventually growth.

“It’s basically emotional character development, in a little sonic package – macabre, bittersweet, and bright.”

Instrumentally, The Cinematic Death of Man was created almost entirely in isolation.

Sean handled the production himself, with Hey Feli, previously Pineapples, contributing backing vocals and Abhinaya appearing on Will She?.

“Instrumentally, this record is fully done by me,” he added.

“The only collaborators here are time, Hey Feli on backing vocals, and Abhinaya on Will She?.

“New collaborators are definitely coming soon.”

The EP builds on the orchestral and electronic textures of earlier releases such as Eat You Alive, but with a warmer and more theatrical lean. Retro synthesisers, particularly Juno tones, replace sharper electronic edges, while organic elements remain central to the sound.

Visuals are also in development, with Sean extending an open call to filmmakers interested in collaboration.

The Cinematic Death of Man will be available on streaming platforms starting tomorrow, January 30.

For more details, follow @byculla.video.club on Instagram.