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    • MIND - Out Of Reach
      1 min read

      MIND - Out Of Reach

      MrSuicideSheep has been my trusted source for emotional electronic music since roughly forever, and Out Of Reach by MIND is exactly the kind of melancholy melodic gem the channel exists to surface. It’s got that wistful, late-night quality where the synths feel like they’re reaching for something the title already told you they can’t quite grab. The vocal sits soft in the mix, more texture than centerpiece, which is the right call because the production is doing the emotional heavy lifting. There’s restraint everywhere here, no oversized drop trying to turn a feeling into a festival moment, just a steady ache that builds and recedes. Sheep rarely misses when it comes to this lane, and MIND clearly understood the assignment. This is headphones-on, staring-out-a-window music, and I mean that as the highest compliment I can give a track. Some nights you don’t want a banger. You want something that sits...

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    • 1 min read

      Defqon.1 let a meme collective close the mainstage and honestly, good

      The strangest booking of Defqon.1 2026: GPF, a collective whose entire brand is treating gabber as the world’s loudest inside joke, get the RED mainstage on Sunday. That’s the ceremonial closing slot, normally handed to a hardstyle institution with a decade of history behind it. This year it goes to the people making uptempo bootlegs of pop songs. I’m fully on board. 1. GPF, DJ Gollum, BassWar & CaoX - I Want It That Way (Uptempo) Yes, it’s the Backstreet Boys. Yes, it’s pushing 180 BPM and completely sincere about being ridiculous. The whole point of GPF is that you can headbang and laugh at the exact same time, and parking that on the Sunday mainstage is the most self-aware thing Q-dance has pulled in years. Soft festivals would never. See you in Biddinghuizen.

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    • 2 min read

      This Week on coldplaysucks — June 7–14, 2026

      Sixty-two tracks went up this week and house ate most of the plate, which is very on brand for a blog that claims to love everything and clearly has a type. Drum & bass kept pace, the bass crowd got fed, and Hardwell apparently decided to move in. We didn’t change the locks. Here’s what mattered. Track of the Week Chase & Status - BADDADAN (KNOCK2 RMX) “BADDADAN” was already a UK jungle monster that refused to leave festival sets alone, so KNOCK2 dragging it across the Atlantic and rebuilding it for the American bass scene was always going to start an argument. He keeps the vocal chants that make the original detonate, then swaps the rolling breakbeat for that hard-hitting trap bounce. Part of me misses the UK swing, but this version demolishes in a different register, and a smart remix translates a tune into a dialect a new...

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    • 1 min read

      They Made 200 Years of Your Salary, Then Called You the Cost Problem

      The number that should be on every front page: at half the companies in the S&P 500, the median worker would have to clock in for 200 years to make what their CEO made last year. Two hundred. Last year that figure was 192, so the math is getting worse on schedule. Median CEO pay climbed almost 6% to $17.7 million in 2025, rewarded for “bigger profits and higher stock prices,” which is corporate for “we found new ways to pay you less.” At Coca-Cola the boss pulled roughly 1,739 times the median worker’s $17,947. Read that wage again. That’s the company, not me, deciding a human year of labor is worth seventeen grand. And here’s the part that makes my teeth hurt: 2026 has the highest announced layoffs since the 2009 crash, and the favorite excuse this year is AI. Not “AI made us more efficient and we passed...

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    • Of The Trees x Tape B - Brackish
      1 min read

      Of The Trees x Tape B - Brackish

      UKF dropped this collab and the two names alone made me hit play before I even read the title. Of The Trees brings that murky, woodsy texture he’s built a whole identity around, and Tape B brings the kind of low end that rearranges your insides at a festival. Brackish is the perfect name for it because the whole track sits in that brackish zone where pretty melodic design meets absolutely filthy bass design. The intro lulls you into thinking this is going to be a gentle one, then the first drop shows up and removes that idea entirely. What I love is how much space they leave around the bass hits, so every wub actually lands instead of smearing into mud. This is festival sub-bass that still has a brain attached. Two of the most interesting people in American bass music linking up was always going to produce something...

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    • Rules - In Your Love
      1 min read

      Rules - In Your Love

      Another MrSuicideSheep pickup and Rules turns In Your Love into a warm, glowing little anthem. This one leans more uplifting than the usual Sheep melancholy, with a melody that plants itself in your head on the first listen and then refuses to leave for the rest of the day. There’s a real pop sensibility under the electronic production, the kind of hook that could cross over if the right person hears it at the right moment. The drop is bright without being obnoxious, all shimmering synth stabs and a groove that wants you moving whether you planned to or not. I keep coming back to the vocal chop in the hook, which is one of those small production choices that makes a track feel finished instead of merely functional. It’s feel-good music that doesn’t feel cheap, which is a harder balance to strike than people give it credit for. Rules...

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    • 5 min read

      Goldie and the Birth of Metalheadz

      Goldie co-founded Metalheadz in 1994 and made jungle symphonic. How Timeless, the Blue Note nights, and gold teeth built drum and bass.
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      Looks like Helvetica. Sounds like a closing argument.
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    • SFRNG, SOVAGI, Aizu - IN MY HEAD
      1 min read

      SFRNG, SOVAGI, Aizu - IN MY HEAD

      NCS keeps cranking out tracks that soundtrack a million Twitch streams and gaming montages, and IN MY HEAD is a strong one from a three-way link between SFRNG, SOVAGI and Aizu. It’s got that polished slightly melancholic electronic sound the NCS catalogue runs on, built around a vocal that digs into the kind of overthinking the title spells out. The production is clean and modern, with a drop that hits hard enough for a hype moment without tipping into pure noise. What surprises me is how much emotional weight they fit into a track clearly designed to be background-friendly. Three producers can easily turn into too many cooks, but these names lock into one cohesive idea instead of fighting for space. NCS gets dismissed as functional content music, and sure, plenty of it is. But every so often the channel surfaces something that actually lands, and this is one of...

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    • SOLAH - Forever
      1 min read

      SOLAH - Forever

      Hospital Records dropping a full SOLAH project called Forever is a proper event for liquid drum and bass heads. Hospital has been the home of soulful melodic DnB for decades, and SOLAH fits that lineage with music that’s as much about feeling as it is about the breakbeat. A full-length lets the artist actually stretch out, moving through the lush emotional liquid that the label built its reputation on without cramming everything into one single. The rolling basslines and warm vocal moments are exactly what I want when I need DnB that hugs you instead of hitting you. Liquid is the genre that converts people who swear they hate drum and bass, because the rhythms are fast but the heart is soft. SOLAH clearly gets that balance. Putting out a whole body of work instead of chasing the single-of-the-week game is a flex of confidence, and Hospital backing it says...

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    • The women running Defqon.1's hardest stages
      1 min read

      The women running Defqon.1's hardest stages

      Hardcore gets typecast as a boys’ club, and the people actually closing these stages keep proving otherwise. A couple weeks out from Defqon.1, here are three who have spent years setting the pace instead of following it. 1. Miss K8 & Tha Watcher - Reflections Miss K8 came out of Ukraine and turned into one of hardcore’s most bankable headliners. “Reflections,” the Harmony of Hardcore 2025 anthem with vocalist Tha Watcher, is two women owning a festival’s entire identity for a year. 2. AniMe - In The End AniMe has been a fixture of Italian hardcore for years, and in 2025 she launched her own label to release exactly the distorted, no-apologies sound she wants. “In The End” is her thesis statement. 3. Korsakoff & Partyraiser - Edison Korsakoff has been doing this longer than most of the lineup and still hits harder than people half her tenure. This Partyraiser...

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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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