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    • HESTER - KYOTO
      1 min read

      HESTER - KYOTO

      NCS gets dismissed as the copyright-free background music factory for Twitch streamers, and that reputation is half-earned, but every so often something genuinely good slips through the gold-rush gates and “KYOTO” is one of them. HESTER builds this around a hooky, slightly off-kilter house groove with just enough bass-house grit to keep it from being polite. The title and the little melodic motif gesture at something East Asian without turning into a cheap pentatonic cliché, which is a trap a lesser producer would’ve walked straight into. What I like is the patience. It doesn’t dump everything in the first thirty seconds the way so much streaming-bait does, it lets the groove establish itself and trusts you to stick around. The drop has a satisfying physical snap, the kind that makes you nod before you’ve decided to. For a free download from a channel built on algorithmic reach, it’s got more...

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    • 1 min read

      Power Hour is the worst hour of your life and you'll fly across the planet for it

      Four days out, so let’s talk about the dumbest, best tradition Q-dance ever invented. Power Hour. Sixty minutes of the hardest, fastest edits they can get away with, the whole RED crowd packed in like it’s the last hour the species gets. Your heart rate has no business being where it ends up. People genuinely plan their entire weekend around being in that crowd at that moment. Here’s the kind of chaos that lives in that hour. 1. Sub Sonik - Aftermath Sounds exactly like what’s left of you afterward. The kind of track Power Hour was built to weaponize, all forward momentum and zero mercy. You don’t dance to this so much as survive it. 2. Warface - S.O.S. Warface has spent years figuring out how to make a track feel like a threat, and this one lands. It’s not asking you to move. It’s informing you that you...

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    • 1 min read

      Ubisoft Kept The Jewels And The Family Name

      Ubisoft just cut another 380 people. The Winnipeg studio is dead after eight years, Belgrade is gone, and the Rainbow Six team in Montreal lost 120 heads in one swing. That’s the sixth round of layoffs in a single calendar year — sixth — and the official reason is a €1.5 billion loss and a cost-cutting plan that runs all the way to 2028. They say it like there’s no money anywhere in the building, like the doors are about to close, like everybody’s just got to understand. Except there was money. Last fall Tencent wired €1.16 billion in cash into a brand-new Ubisoft subsidiary called Vantage, and Vantage just happens to be the box they put all the franchises that actually print cash into — Assassin’s Creed, Far Cry, Rainbow Six. They valued that one slice at €3.8 billion and handed the CEO’s own son a seat running it....

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    • Spinnin' Sessions Radio - Episode #683
      1 min read

      Spinnin' Sessions Radio - Episode #683

      Not a single track this time but a full Spinnin’ Sessions Radio episode, and honestly these mixshows are an underrated way to keep your finger on the pulse of what the big dance labels are about to shove down everyone’s throat. Episode #683 is an hour of exactly what you’d expect from Spinnin’, which is to say wall-to-wall festival house and dance bangers mixed with the precision of people who do this every single week. I’m not going to pretend every track in here is a masterpiece. Mixshows are a numbers game and some of these will be forgotten by next month. But that’s also the fun of it. You put it on in the background, half-listening, and then something cuts through and you’re scrambling to find the tracklist. There’s a stretch in the back third where the energy really locks in and the transitions get genuinely smooth. Spinnin’ has...

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    • Rueben - Tired Of Fighting
      1 min read

      Rueben - Tired Of Fighting

      Another UKF Dubstep pull, and Rueben’s Tired Of Fighting hits a softer, sadder note than the genre usually allows itself. The title isn’t lying. This is dubstep with actual feelings underneath the bass weight, the kind of track that pairs a heavy drop with a vocal that sounds genuinely worn down. I love that contrast. The whole thing rides this tension between wanting to collapse and wanting to go absolutely feral, and Rueben never fully picks a side. The bass is huge but it’s tuned warm rather than aggressive, more of a hug than a punch. There’s a vocal cut that loops the title until it stops sounding like words and starts sounding like a mood. By the second half the track gives up trying to be melancholy and just lets the low end take over, which feels like the emotional arc of a bad night out in the best...

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    • Flux Pavilion - Bass Cannon (Flux's Version) [Crankdat Remix]
      1 min read

      Flux Pavilion - Bass Cannon (Flux's Version) [Crankdat Remix]

      So we’re doing the Taylor Swift thing with dubstep now, and honestly I’m not mad about it. “Bass Cannon” is one of those 2011 records that basically built a generation of teenagers’ speaker problems, and re-recording it as “Flux’s Version” with Crankdat on remix duty is the most knowing move Flux Pavilion could make. The original was already a blunt instrument, and Crankdat doesn’t try to make it clever. He makes it bigger, tighter, meaner, the low end re-tuned for systems that didn’t exist when the first version dropped. There’s a real risk in touching a track this nostalgic, because the people who loved it loved it at fifteen and they will notice every change. But the new low end has that modern weight to it, the kind that sits in your chest instead of your ears, and the old vocal stab still lands like a punchline you’ve heard a...

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    • Rova - The Fire
      1 min read

      Rova - The Fire

      Rova’s The Fire is the kind of drum and bass that doesn’t waste a second convincing you it means business. UKF surfaced it and within ten seconds I understood why. This is high-energy, no-nonsense DnB with a bassline that sounds like it’s actively angry at you. The drums roll with that satisfying mechanical precision the genre lives or dies on, and Rova keeps the arrangement tight enough that nothing ever sags. There’s a vocal sample doing the heavy emotional lifting in the intro before the whole thing detonates into something far more aggressive. I keep coming back to the bass tone here, which has this metallic edge that cuts through everything else in the mix. The second drop introduces a new rhythm that completely flips the feel without losing momentum. That’s hard to pull off. A lot of DnB producers settle for one good idea and stretch it across four...

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    • Equation - I'll Say A Prayer 4 U (Starr Traxx Edit)
      1 min read

      Equation - I'll Say A Prayer 4 U (Starr Traxx Edit)

      The “4 U” in the title tells you everything about where this one’s coming from, that early-2000s garage-house lineage where every track was a tiny love letter and the spelling got casual. “I’ll Say A Prayer 4 U” is soulful house done with real warmth, the Starr Traxx edit buffing it up for current floors without scrubbing off the gospel-tinged emotion that’s the whole point. There’s a vocal sample that loops just enough to feel like a prayer and not enough to feel like a gimmick, sitting over a bassline you can feel in your sternum. This is the underrepresented corner of dance music as far as I’m concerned, the stuff that makes you feel held rather than hyped. I’ve been on a deep-house kick lately and tracks like this are why. It doesn’t shout. It just opens up, gives you a groove to lean into, and trusts you to...

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    • Ricey - Years
      1 min read

      Ricey - Years

      Second mau5trap pick in a row because the label is just cooking right now and I refuse to apologize for it. Ricey’s Years is the more emotional cousin to the usual progressive house template, the kind of track that sounds like it was made at 4am about a specific person. The melody does this thing where it almost resolves and then slips sideways, which keeps you leaning in waiting for a landing that takes its sweet time. I’m a sucker for a lead that sounds slightly sad even when the BPM says you should be dancing. The bassline underneath is doing quiet heavy lifting, never showing off, just holding the floor steady so the top end can ache. By the back half it opens up into something genuinely big without ever turning into a stadium cliché. Years is the track you put on when you want to feel something but...

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    • The History of Techno: From Detroit to Berlin
      5 min read

      The History of Techno: From Detroit to Berlin

      Techno wasn't born in a Berlin bunker. The real history of techno starts in Detroit with the Belleville Three. Detroit made it, Europe scaled it.
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WE COULDN'T SHUT UP ABOUT THESE

Editor's picks

the one we couldn't shut up about

Raise Your Weapon

deadmau5

The transition at 4:00 is the whole point. Coldplay would never.

shoplift it from a friend

The One

Swedish House Mafia · Pharrell

Exactly as big and as dumb as it needs to be. Volume up.

quiet correction

The Grudge (live)

Chilly Gonzales

Electronic doesn't have to mean loud. Eleven minutes, all of them.

first set of four

Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2

Skrillex

Recorded off the booth feed. He played Scary Monsters before it was Scary Monsters.

paper romance

Paper Romance

Groove Armada

Genre-hopping with a new crew of vocalists. It still works.

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