Donāt you just love paintings and art?!
Omar Apollo recently unveiled the artwork for his upcoming EP, Live For Me, which is set to be released on Friday, October 6. The new project will include four songs: āIce Slippin,ā āLive For Me,ā āAngel,ā and āPilot.ā
Besides being obviously excited about new music by Apollo, fans are also quite thirsty for the artwork featured in the upcoming EP. The front cover is a beautiful painting of Apollo seemingly lying down, shirtless, touching his bare chest, and looking seductively. The back cover is a painting of Apolloās seemingly erect penis between his naked legs.
The back cover of Live For Me has been censored for social media. However, Apollo made it clear that the āuncensored back cover portrait [is] available with purchaseā of a vinyl copy of the EP.
In his usual cheeky way, Apollo added an eggplant emoji and a shushing face emoji to the caption. āIām excited,ā he wrote.
One day later, Apollo shared another tweet with an update on how the EP sales were going:
āWe sold 1,400 in 7 minutes so far omg [laughing emoji].āā
Live For Me will be Apolloās fourth EP, following 2018ās Stereo, 2019ās Friends, and 2022ās Live at NPRās Tiny Desk. So far, heās only released one studio album, 2022ās Ivory, which featured the viral hit single āEvergreen.ā
Scroll through to see the three variants of Omar Apolloās Live For Me EP in vinyl. The EP comes out Friday, October 6 on all music streaming platforms, but physical copies ā which include the back cover artwork ā are available for purchase.
Live For Me Vinyl Autographed (Brown)

Warner Records Inc
You can purchase āLive For Me Vinyl Autographed (Brown)ā on Omar Apolloās official website.
Live For Me Vinyl (Sky Blue)

Warner Records Inc
You can purchase āLive For Me Vinyl (Sky Blue)ā on Omar Apolloās official website.
Live For Me Vinyl (Brown)

Warner Records Inc
You can purchase āLive For Me Vinyl (Brown)ā on Omar Apolloās official website.







How a queer-led yoga community is helping refugees heal & rebuild
A partnership between a Boston yoga studio and displaced refugees in Malawi shows how everyday citizens can quietly help communities shattered by war.