“Jack” by Breach is one of those 2012 house records that everybody in a certain age bracket has a sweaty basement memory attached to, that paranoid synth stab burned into the collective brain. So Calle Lebraun going head to head with it on Defected is a bold flex, and the good news is the new version respects the original’s nerve instead of softening it. The bones are still there, that twitchy, claustrophobic groove that made “Jack” feel less like a party and more like a chase. Lebraun tightens the drums for a modern floor and lets the tension sit longer before releasing it, which is exactly the right instinct. House has been so comfortable and sun-dappled lately that I forgot it could feel a little dangerous. This one remembers. It’s not trying to make you smile, it’s trying to make you move whether you want to or not. I played...
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June 22, 2026 at 12:09 PM
1 min read
Calle Lebraun vs Breach - Visions (Jack)
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   house tech house uk house
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June 22, 2026 at 11:14 AM
1 min read
RAVEN - TOLD YOU
Read more . . . →Trap Nation closing out the list with RAVEN’s TOLD YOU, and this one’s got the kind of confidence the title promises. This is trap built for impact, all booming 808s and a vocal chop that struts through the track like it owns the place. RAVEN isn’t reinventing the formula here, but the execution is sharp enough that it doesn’t matter. The drop hits with real weight, the bass tuned low enough to test whatever you’re playing it through. What sets it apart is the melodic element threaded through the aggression, a haunting little synth line that gives the whole thing an emotional undertow most trap forgets to include. There’s a beat switch in the second half that flips the energy completely, which is becoming a RAVEN signature if you’ve been paying attention. I respect a producer who refuses to let a track coast on a single idea. TOLD YOU is...
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June 22, 2026 at 9:32 AM
1 min read
Arcando & Charlotte Haining - Release Me (Drum & Bass Edit)
Read more . . . →Charlotte Haining has one of those voices that producers fight over for good reason, because she can sell heartbreak and euphoria in the same breath, and Arcando hands her a beat that lets her do both. This is the drum and bass edit, which means the emotional build you’d expect from a Monstercat melodic track suddenly gets legs and starts sprinting. I’m usually wary of the “sad vocal over fast drums” formula because it’s been run into the ground by a thousand anonymous producers chasing a sync placement. This one survives because Haining is actually committed to the lyric, and the drop doesn’t abandon the feeling she set up, it just gives it somewhere to run. The synth work in the back half has a glassy brightness that I kept rewinding to catch. It’s not reinventing anything and it doesn’t need to. Sometimes you want a track that knows exactly...
- This entry was posted in:   drum and bass electronic melodic
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June 22, 2026 at 7:04 AM
1 min read
Defqon.1 is 5 days out and these are the 2026 IDs that'll actually go off
Read more . . . →Five days. The wristband’s been sitting on my kitchen counter since the lineup was still a rumor, and now it’s real. Every other festival this summer is trying to sell you a sunset and a seltzer sponsor. Defqon sells you a field full of people who drove from four countries to scream at a kick drum. So here’s the new stuff from this year, the tracks that are going to do damage on the mainstage, not the catalogue classics the whole field already knows by heart. 1. Primeshock & Villain - Deep Dive Technically this is the Relevatez anthem, but it’s built like a Defqon weapon anyway. Melodic enough to get the whole field singing along, then the back half drops the act and just hits. You’ll hear it three times across the weekend and pretend you’re sick of it by Sunday. 2. Sub Sonik - 99 PROBLEMS (But My...
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June 22, 2026 at 7:04 AM
1 min read
The Tariff Refund Only Flows One Direction: Up
Read more . . . →So the Supreme Court finally struck the tariffs down, 6-3, and ruled that Trump never had the authority to impose them in the first place. Good. Except the customs agency already collected about $133 billion before anyone made him stop. That money came out of the country one checkout line at a time — the average household paid somewhere north of a thousand bucks last year, manufacturing shed tens of thousands of jobs, and the whole thing was sold as toughness. Now a court has confirmed it was illegal the entire time. You’d think the obvious next step is giving it back. It is giving it back. To the corporations. There’s a refund portal that opened in April, and the importers and their customs brokers are already lined up — Costco, Revlon, Bumble Bee — filing to claw their money out of the Treasury. The lawyers who handle this kind...
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June 21, 2026 at 9:31 PM
1 min read
Pamex - brainwash
Read more . . . →Trap City surfaces a lot of disposable festival trap, so I went in skeptical, and Pamex’s brainwash slapped the skepticism right out of me. This is the kind of trap that doesn’t bother with subtlety because subtlety was never the point. The 808s are tuned to rattle whatever cheap speaker you’re playing it on, and the vocal chop in the build is genuinely unsettling in the best way, like a sample warped just past the point of being recognizable. The drop is mean. There’s a half-time switch in the second half that I did not see coming and it completely re-centers the track. I love when a producer hides a second idea inside a song that already gave you what you came for. brainwash is short, loud, and gone before it overstays its welcome, which is exactly how trap this aggressive should operate. Stick it on, annoy your neighbors, apologize...
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June 21, 2026 at 4:48 PM
1 min read
MatricK - Can't Stop Us Now
Read more . . . →Revealed Recordings is Hardwell’s house, which usually means festival fireworks engineered to detonate at exactly the right second for the drone footage. MatricK plays that game but doesn’t sound like he’s reading the manual. Can’t Stop Us Now front-loads a vocal that should be corny and somehow isn’t, then drops into a lead that’s all teeth. I went in expecting the usual big-room paint-by-numbers and got something with actual snarl in the low end. The kick hits like it has a grudge. There’s a moment around the second drop where the whole thing tightens up and you realize he’s been holding back the real punch the entire time. It’s the kind of track that makes zero sense in your headphones on a Tuesday and total sense at 1am with a thousand people who all decided to lose it at once. He’s not reinventing anything. He’s just doing the loud thing...
- This entry was posted in:   big room electronic
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June 21, 2026 at 1:41 PM
1 min read
WAKE & Luma - In The Dark
Read more . . . →Dim Mak still operating in 2026 is its own small miracle, and “In The Dark” from WAKE and Luma is a reminder the label can still find producers with teeth. This sits in that bass-house pocket where the groove is sleek but the drop has bite, a moody little number that earns its title. The vocal is processed into a ghost, more texture than message, floating over a bassline that prowls. I like that it doesn’t oversell. There’s a temptation in this genre to pile on the screeching mid-range until everything sounds like a malfunctioning robot, and WAKE and Luma resist it. They keep things dark and controlled, letting the negative space do half the work. The result is something you could drop in a club set without clearing the floor and still play in headphones without fatigue. It’s confident production from a pairing I didn’t have on my radar...
- This entry was posted in:   bass house electronic
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June 21, 2026 at 1:26 PM
1 min read
Justė, Jaxstyle, Jon - Turn The Lights Off (AFROJACK Remix)
Read more . . . →AFROJACK getting on the remix is a flex, and Turn The Lights Off comes out the other side as a proper big-room dance weapon. Spinnin’ Records is in its element here, this is exactly the kind of glossy festival-ready dance music the label has been pumping out for over a decade. The original by Justė, Jaxstyle and Jon already had a solid hook, and AFROJACK does what AFROJACK does, which is make everything bigger and cleaner and more designed to detonate at a main stage. The vocal is catchy enough to survive the maximalist treatment, riding over a drop built for maximum hands-in-the-air impact. Is it subtle? Absolutely not. Was it ever trying to be? No. Sometimes you want a track that knows precisely what it is and commits without a hint of self-doubt. AFROJACK has been doing this long enough that he could phone it in, and to his...
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June 21, 2026 at 10:49 AM
1 min read
Habstrakt & Simona Shao - Mine
Read more . . . →Habstrakt has been one of the most dependable bass house producers in the game for ages, and teaming up with Simona Shao on Mine pulls the genre somewhere a little more vocal-forward than usual. Monstercat dropped it and it slots right into the label’s whole personality. The bassline is the star, obviously, this rubbery wobbling thing that bounces rather than bludgeons. Simona Shao’s vocal gives the track a center of gravity that pure bass house tracks often lack, something to hold onto while the low end does its thing underneath. The drop is springy and fun rather than brutal, which is the right call for a track built around a voice. I’ve always liked that Habstrakt makes bass music you can actually move to instead of just bracing against. There’s a swing to his programming that a lot of his heavier peers never figured out. Mine isn’t trying to melt...
- This entry was posted in:   bass house electronic
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June 22, 2026 at 12:09 PM
1 min read
Editor's picks
Raise Your Weapon
deadmau5
The transition at 4:00 is the whole point. Coldplay would never.
The One
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Exactly as big and as dumb as it needs to be. Volume up.
The Grudge (live)
Chilly Gonzales
Electronic doesn't have to mean loud. Eleven minutes, all of them.
Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2
Skrillex
Recorded off the booth feed. He played Scary Monsters before it was Scary Monsters.
Paper Romance
Groove Armada
Genre-hopping with a new crew of vocalists. It still works.
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