bWy Returns With UMAMI, a Conscious Drum & Bass Single Produced by NOWARE
The German MC Pairs Rolling Bass With Lyrical Weight on a Festival-Built Track
On UMAMI, bWy runs rolling drum & bass under conscious rap, two modes that rarely share three minutes. The German independent artist built the single with producer NOWARE, and it is out now. A heavy low-end carries vocals that hold real lyrical weight. The result hits as hard in a festival tent as in late-night headphones.
You can listen to our full playlist which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


bWy Keeps the Vocals in Focus on Drum & Bass Cut UMAMI
bWy released UMAMI on 22 May 2026. It sits firmly in drum & bass territory, yet it never treats the MC as an afterthought. NOWARE keeps the breakbeat rolling and pushes the bassline to the front. That rhythm moves a room. Over the top, bWy lays conscious rap without losing a word. The result is a club record with something on its mind.
The balance is the whole idea. Most dancefloor music asks nothing of a listener beyond movement. UMAMI keeps the tempo high and still makes space for the writing. The title says it plainly. Umami is the savoury taste that stays on the palate after the bite, and bWy turns that into a promise: a track that lingers after the final beat.
NOWARE Builds the Rolling Beat While bWy Carries the Message
NOWARE runs the production, and the mix is where UMAMI earns its name. The drums move at the brisk tempo drum & bass demands. The arrangement still leaves pockets of space, so bWy‘s verses sit on top rather than fight the break. Producers who chase only the drop bury the vocal. Here the balance runs the other way, with the rhythm in service of the words.
That choice makes the conscious-rap label more than a tag. bWy treats the track as a vehicle for something to say, not a frame for a bassline. You can actually hear the writing over a club-ready beat. It is a hard trick in a genre built around the drop. It is also why UMAMI reads as both a dancefloor cut and a piece of real writing.

Shot at BAY STUDIO in Fürth and Built for the Main Stage
UMAMI arrived with a full music video, filmed at BAY STUDIO in Fürth. The cinematic treatment leans into the song’s live ambition. It frames bWy as a stage performer first. That fits a track aimed at festival sound systems, not a quiet living room.
The festival focus is no accident. bWy has spent years on stages across the DACH region and beyond. He built the single for that environment, where a clean drop and a quotable verse both earn their keep. Watch the official video below. The low-end lands on a large rig, not a pair of earbuds.


Who bWy Made UMAMI For, From DnB Heads to Conscious Rap Fans
If your rotation already leans on Chase & Status, UMAMI will feel familiar. That duo built a following by running drum & bass under MC-led, rap-inflected vocals. bWy works the same seam with his own conscious slant. Fans of Rudimental will know the instinct: put songwriting and a strong vocal at the centre of a DnB arrangement, then carry it to a main stage. Anyone who chases the big-room pull of Sub Focus will find the same priority here, a low-end that lands hard in a crowd.
The target is broad but specific. Drum & bass heads, electronic-music fans, conscious-rap listeners and festivalgoers all have a way into UMAMI. According to 931 Lebt, the team representing bWy, “The blend of powerful DnB and conscious lyrics is designed to resonate, leaving an impression that lasts long after the last beat drops.”
bWy Pairs the UMAMI Release With the 931Lebt Festival He Founded
bWy does not stop at recording. He founded the 931Lebt festival, a nod to the southern-German region he calls home. He has also built a reputation as an independent infrastructure builder, an act who makes platforms for other artists rather than waiting for one. That background shapes UMAMI. The single comes from someone who knows festival stages from both sides of the barrier.
His catalogue runs across emo rap, hip-hop and electronic fusion. UMAMI distils that range into drum & bass, with NOWARE keeping things tight. Illustrate Magazine has profiled him before. For a German independent working without a major behind him, the single points clearly at where the live show goes next.
RapStar.News curator team: “What earns UMAMI a place in our rotation is restraint. NOWARE keeps the drop clean so bWy‘s verses never get buried, and that discipline is rarer in festival drum & bass than the genre’s reputation suggests.”
Beyond the player above, UMAMI streams now on Apple Music and Tidal. Keep up with bWy across platforms: follow him on Instagram, TikTok and X, subscribe to his YouTube channel, and catch his live streams on Twitch. Full details sit on his official site.


