The duo occasionally invites friends (Ah Suet, who speaks French, for instance) and relatives (Nicole's younger sister) to participate in their albums and shows.
[7] In 2004, the duo, along with four other indie bands from Hong Kong, founded Harbour Records and released their debut album The OK Thing to Do on Sunday Afternoon Is to Toddle in the Zoo.
In 2009, the group started writing politically themed songs such as "Divvying Up Stephen Lam's $300,000 salary" (referring to the former Chief Secretary of Hong Kong) and "Donald Tsang, Please Die",[8] the latter of which was written after Tsang suggested that the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 were insignificant compared to China's current economic power[9] (such social/political themes had already been extensively explored by Ah P with Forever Tarkovsky Club, a side project he had set up with Pixeltoy's Ho Shan between 2007 and 2009).
[10][additional citation(s) needed] A fourth album entitled Poetics – Something Between Montparnasse and Mongkok was released on 23 November 2009, which contains many of those politically charged songs.
[12] Dubbed the "local indie pop darlings" of Hong Kong by the South China Morning Post,[13] My Little Airport is recognized for their "saccharine vocals and simple, almost dreamlike melodies," as well as the satirical and humorous nature of their lyrics.