[3] Howie and Vallance both attended St. George's School (Vancouver) but were merely acquaintances, despite enjoying similar tastes in music.
[4] After high school, Vallance moved to New York City, where he worked for a record engineering company for Dutch artist Matthew Dekay on Lee Burridge's All Day I Dream imprint.
[7] Howie continued singing and after a year at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, he also moved to New York.
[11] After some studio time, the duo showed the Scissor & Thread crew, specifically Francis Harris and Anthony Collins, what they had been working on.
[citation needed] The album also featured two new bonus tracks, "She Don't Mind" and "Here We Are", along with live versions of "Tearing Me Up", "Before I Fall", and "Nothing At All.
[32][33] Described by the artists as "a love tale for the digital age", the album is presented over six continuously mixed tracks.
[34] With typical tour schedules disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, the duo told Forbes that they intend to perform livestream sets and begin to collect content for another album.
The artists describe it as feeling "bigger musically, with dense, layered instrumentals; clear-eyed vocals; and gritty, textured arrangements that always seem to settle in the melancholy of minor keys."
[47] Bob Moses has been featured heavily on BBC Radio 1, including their debut Essential Mix[48] and a live performance from Maida Vale Studios.
In a 2023 year-end post on the band's official Facebook and Instagram pages, Howie and Vallance announced that they had both become fathers of baby boys.