SAiiLOR has quietly become one of those remixers whose name on a track is a reason to click, and the “i know i know” rework keeps the streak alive. We’ve posted SAiiLOR before because the man has a gift for taking a fragile vocal and building a warm electronic cocoon around it without smothering the original feeling. STELLA LEFTY’s voice carries this real ache, that 3am texting-your-ex energy, and SAiiLOR is smart enough to let it sit out front. The production glows. Soft synths, a kick that nudges rather than punches, and just enough movement to qualify it for the dancefloor without abandoning the bedroom-cry mood it started in. I find a lot of MrSuicideSheep uploads blur into pleasant wallpaper, but this one actually lands an emotional hit. It’s the kind of remix that respects the song instead of using it as raw material. Plays equally well on headphones at...
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June 20, 2026 at 12:31 PM
1 min read
STELLA LEFTY - i know i know (SAiiLOR Remix)
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   electronic melodic house
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June 20, 2026 at 9:39 AM
1 min read
Document One - Hold On Me
Read more . . . →Document One have been one of the most reliable names in drum and bass for years now, and Hold On Me is them doing exactly what they’re great at with zero wasted motion. This is dancefloor DnB built for maximum impact, all rolling drums and a bassline that switches up just often enough to keep you guessing. The vocal hook is sticky in that way that gets lodged in your skull for the rest of the day whether you want it there or not. What I appreciate about these two is they never overcomplicate things. The drop does what a drop should do and then gets out of the way. There’s a halftime breakdown in the middle that gives you exactly one bar to recover before snapping back to full pace. Document One understand that DnB is fundamentally a physical genre and they make tracks for actual bodies in actual...
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June 20, 2026 at 7:42 AM
1 min read
Gunz For Hire are closing Defqon.1 2026 and that's the only correct ending
Read more . . . →Ran-D and Adaro have a side project where they put on bandanas and make the meanest, dumbest, most fun hardstyle on the calendar. It’s called Gunz For Hire, and Q-dance just handed them the slot that closes Defqon.1 2026. Whoever signed off on that decision deserves a raise. Three reasons it’s going to be chaos. 1. Gunz For Hire - Bolivia The one that put the project on the map. Bolivia is gangster-movie samples over a kick that absolutely means it, and somehow it never got old. Pure villain energy. 2. Gunz For Hire - Hard Knock Life They flipped the Annie line into a hardstyle stomp and dared you to be mad about it. I’m not. Hard Knock Life is exactly as ridiculous as it sounds and it goes off every time without fail. 3. Gunz For Hire - Gangsters Don’t Dance The thesis statement. Gangsters Don’t Dance is...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic hardstyle seasonal
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June 20, 2026 at 6:53 AM
1 min read
They Bought The Stock, Not The Workers
Read more . . . →Meta cut roughly 8,000 jobs this year — about ten percent of a division — and dressed it up the way they always do: getting disciplined, freeing up resources for the AI bet, tough choices nobody wanted to make. Except in the same stretch of months the company authorized another forty billion dollars to buy back its own stock, and burned through more than seventeen billion of it in a single quarter. So the money was there. It was sitting right there the whole time. It just wasn’t earmarked for the people who got walked out by security. Here’s what a buyback actually does, because they count on you not knowing. The company takes its cash and spends it purchasing its own shares off the open market. That shrinks the number of shares floating around, which mechanically pushes up the price of every one that’s left. And who’s holding the...
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June 20, 2026 at 6:39 AM
1 min read
Siege, David LeSal - Burn Down The House
Read more . . . →Toolroom is the spiritual home of clean, peak-time tech house, and Siege teaming with David LeSal on “Burn Down The House” is right in that wheelhouse. This is built for one job: keeping a club moving at midnight without anyone having to think too hard. The groove is rubbery and relentless, that classic tech-house swing where the bassline does a little dance under your feet and refuses to quit. The vocal sample gives it just enough attitude to stand out from the endless conveyor belt of similar tracks the genre churns out. I’ll be honest, tech house is a genre where the bar for memorability is brutally high, because so much of it sounds interchangeable by design. This clears it on sheer groove and a hook that sticks. Nothing about it is reinventing the form, but it executes the form with real polish and confidence. Drop it in a warm-up...
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June 19, 2026 at 11:38 PM
1 min read
Sentinel - Bring The House Down
Read more . . . →STMPD has become Martin Garrix’s playground for the harder, clubbier end of the dance spectrum, and Sentinel’s “Bring The House Down” fits the brief with a title that’s basically a mission statement. This is muscular house music, the kind with a bassline that drives rather than glides and a hook engineered for a festival tent full of sweaty people. It does what it says on the tin, no overthinking required. I keep flip-flopping on STMPD as a label, because some of their output feels like it was assembled by committee to test well in a stadium. But this one has actual grit to it. The drop is punchy without tipping into the cookie-cutter bigroom thud that killed the genre’s reputation a decade ago. There’s a sense of momentum, a forward lean, that makes it more than functional. Sentinel might not be a household name yet, but a track this clean...
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June 19, 2026 at 7:11 PM
1 min read
Darren Styles feat. MERYLL - Miss You
Read more . . . →Darren Styles has been a titan of the harder, faster end of dance music for longer than some of his current fans have been alive, so seeing him land on Armada with Miss You is a fun crossover. This leans more melodic and trance-adjacent than his hardcore roots, but the signature Styles energy is still all over it. MERYLL’s vocal is the emotional core, soaring over a production that builds with the kind of euphoric urgency Darren Styles basically invented. The track wears its heart on its sleeve and makes zero apologies for it. This is unashamed, hands-in-the-air rave music with a slightly tearful edge, and I am completely here for it. There’s a moment in the breakdown where everything strips back to just the vocal and a single synth before the whole thing rushes back in, and it gets me every time. Styles knows exactly which emotional buttons to...
- This entry was posted in:   hard dance trance
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June 19, 2026 at 4:49 PM
1 min read
Rova - Think I Am
Read more . . . →Rova keeps quietly turning out drum and bass that sounds like it was built for a 6am room when the lights start coming up and nobody wants to leave yet. “Think I Am” rides a vocal hook that’s equal parts longing and defiance, the kind of line you mumble to yourself on the night bus home. The rolling break underneath is clean enough to feel polite and heavy enough to keep your feet honest. What gets me is the restraint. There’s no big festival switch-up, no needless second drop screaming for attention. Rova trusts the groove to do the work, and it pays off because the groove is genuinely lovely. The pads sit just behind the bassline like fog over a motorway, and the whole thing has that bittersweet UK liquid glow that’s hard to fake. This is music for the comedown more than the peak, and there’s nothing wrong...
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June 19, 2026 at 3:31 PM
1 min read
ANDROMEDA - NO PROMENADA
Read more . . . →Trance has been quietly having a moment again and tracks like NO PROMENADA are why. ANDROMEDA isn’t going for the misty-eyed Anjuna thing here. This is harder, faster, built for a dark room at 3am rather than a sunrise set. The lead synth is a laser pointed directly at the part of your brain that responds to repetition, and the track just keeps hammering that one idea until repetition becomes the whole point. There’s almost no melody in the traditional sense, which is exactly why it works. It’s hypnosis disguised as a club track. The breakdown strips everything back to a single pulsing note before the whole thing slams back in and you remember why people used to drive three hours to stand in a field for this feeling. Elysian Records has been putting out some seriously uncompromising trance lately and they clearly do not care about crossover appeal. Good....
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June 19, 2026 at 2:00 PM
1 min read
Trash Panda B2B Nobody
Read more . . . →Pulled out of the dumpster behind the club at 4am, already mixing cleaner than half the lineup. Book him.
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June 20, 2026 at 12:31 PM
1 min read
Editor's picks
Raise Your Weapon
deadmau5
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The Grudge (live)
Chilly Gonzales
Electronic doesn't have to mean loud. Eleven minutes, all of them.
Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2
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Recorded off the booth feed. He played Scary Monsters before it was Scary Monsters.
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Genre-hopping with a new crew of vocalists. It still works.
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