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    • 1 min read

      The Tomorrowland bass stages exist to rearrange your organs

      Six days. For everyone convinced Tomorrowland is all euphoric hands-in-the-air stuff, the bass stages exist to rearrange your internal organs. This is the corner of the festival with the fewest phones out and the most damage done to necks and knees: 1. REZZ - Edge The goggles, the hypnosis-spiral visuals, the mid-tempo dread. REZZ built a whole world and this is a clean way into it. It sits around 110bpm and hits harder than tracks running twice the speed. Nobody else on a mainstage-level bill sounds remotely like her, and that’s the point. 2. GRiZ & Subtronics - Griztronics Two of dubstep’s biggest names making the most gleefully stupid drop in the genre. That wobble at the one-minute mark is designed to make a crowd headbang until their necks give out. Subtronics plays Tomorrowland this year, so somewhere in that field a spine is in genuine danger. Bring a neck...

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    • 1 min read

      The Weeknd & Playboi Carti - Timeless (RemK Remix)

      Timeless was already everywhere, so a remix has to justify itself in the first thirty seconds, and RemK’s does. This takes the Weeknd and Carti’s swaggering original and drops it into a harder, bass-forward trap edit that keeps the vocal attitude while adding a low end the radio version was missing entirely. The flip at 1:05 reworks the beat into something you’d actually hear rattle a car at a red light, all sub and space, Carti’s ad-libs suddenly sitting in a much meaner pocket. Remixes of songs this famous usually just slap a generic festival drop under an acapella and call it a day; RemK bothered to rebuild the groove from the floor up. The Weeknd’s hook survives the transplant, which is the real test, since a lesser edit buries the thing that made you click. It won’t replace the original in anyone’s rotation, but as a late-night, windows-down alternate...

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    • Yere - Special
      1 min read

      Yere - Special

      Special is the rare NCS track I’d happily put on outside of a Fortnite lobby. Yere turns in a piece of melodic electronic with more emotional weight than the copyright-free catalogue usually bothers with — a wistful topline, a drop that prioritises melody over sheer volume, the whole thing carrying a slightly bittersweet glow. The lead synth in the drop at 1:20 has this bell-like tone that rings out over the beat rather than smashing through it, and the restraint is what makes it land. There’s a moment in the second breakdown where everything strips back to just piano and the vocal, and it’s genuinely lovely, the kind of pause most producers at this tempo are too impatient to build in. Yere clearly cares about the songwriting underneath the electronics, which you can’t say for a lot of tracks sharing this real estate. This won’t blow any roofs off, but...

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    • 1 min read

      One Day Out, Four Days Locked Out

      Four thousand nurses at Brigham and Women’s walked off the job for exactly one day. Mass General Brigham locked them out for four. Read that again: you protest for a single shift over pay and staffing, and management’s answer is to bar the doors and tell you to come back Sunday. That’s not a labor dispute anymore, it’s a punishment, and it’s the clearest confession of who these people actually are that you’ll get all year. Here’s the part that should make your teeth hurt. The hospital says the nurses’ ask — roughly 7% over eighteen months, and please stop charging us more for our own health insurance — is too expensive. Meanwhile they flew in 1,300 replacement nurses and are covering their flights, their hotels, their meals. Run the numbers on 1,300 travel nurses for a week of scab wages plus airfare and lodging in Boston in July. It...

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    • 1 min read

      Projects in Blue - Believe In Me

      MrSuicideSheep uploads are a coin flip between forgettable and quietly great, and Believe In Me is the second kind. Projects in Blue work in that widescreen melodic-electronic zone where the goal is less a drop than a swell, and this one swells beautifully: the lead synth at 1:40 has a slight detune that makes it sound like it’s about to cry. The vocal is gentle, almost buried, more instrument than message, and it works better for staying back there. This is headphone music, the sort that makes a boring commute feel like the closing scene of a film you’d actually watch. I don’t know much about this project, but the production has a confidence that suggests they’ve put in years somewhere under other names. There’s a warmth sitting in the low end that keeps the whole thing from floating away into pure prettiness. The rare MrSuicideSheep upload I’ll still remember...

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    • 1 min read

      MUST DIE! - VOGUE

      MUST DIE! makes music that sounds like a server room catching fire, and VOGUE is him leaning all the way into it. The first minute is almost polite by his standards, a clipped vocal and some negative space, and then around 1:20 the whole thing folds in on itself and starts screaming metal. I’ve heard a lot of design-y dubstep that mistakes ugliness for aggression; this one earns the ugliness because there’s an actual hook underneath, a two-note motif that keeps surfacing between the chaos so you never lose the thread. It’s the rare heavy track I could hum afterwards, which shouldn’t be possible given how much of it is pure texture. On a real system the sub sits right in your sternum. On earbuds you get maybe half the picture, so don’t judge it there. The title’s a joke and the track isn’t; it struts, then it bites. Good...

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    • Justin Hawkes & scribe - Wayward
      1 min read

      Justin Hawkes & scribe - Wayward

      This one made me miss shows I’ve never even been to. Justin Hawkes writes drum and bass like a songwriter first, and Wayward with scribe is all yearning, a vocal that sits somewhere between pop and prayer, riding a break that never gets in its way. The drop doesn’t detonate so much as bloom, which is the whole appeal; at 1:55 it opens up and you feel your chest do the thing rather than your feet. Hawkes has a knack for chords that stay just slightly sad even at full tempo, and scribe’s top line leans into that instead of fighting for brightness. I’ve had it looping while working and it hasn’t once broken my concentration, which for drum and bass is a real compliment. There’s a version of this genre obsessed with being the hardest thing in the room; Wayward is happy being the prettiest, and that’s a much...

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    • jonty - off2
      1 min read

      jonty - off2

      NCS is where a certain kind of listener goes for copyright-free energy, and most of it blurs together, so it’s worth stopping when something arrives with an actual identity. off2 has one. jonty builds it around a chopped vocal that’s been pitched and stuttered until it’s basically another synth, and the groove underneath has a bounce closer to UK garage than the usual NCS big-room fare. The drop at 1:15 is deceptively light, no massive wall of sound, just a springy bassline and that vocal doing gymnastics, and it’s more fun for the restraint. Lowercase-titled tracks by lowercase-named producers usually signal a certain bedroom-producer humility, and this has it in the best way: unpretentious, tight, clearly made by someone who just likes the way these sounds knock against each other. Three minutes, no filler, gone before it overstays its welcome. The kind of track that makes wading through NCS worth...

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    • The Second Voice - DON'T LEAVE
      1 min read

      The Second Voice - DON'T LEAVE

      DON’T LEAVE wears its heart on its sleeve and then screams it through a festival PA. The Second Voice make the kind of emotional dance-pop that Spinnin has basically built a business model on — a pleading vocal, a huge melodic drop, feelings dialled to eleven. The melodrama is turned all the way up, and the topline earns it: the singer sounds like they mean every syllable of that title. The drop at 1:22 trades the expected big vocal-chop lead for something a little more restrained, letting the emotion carry weight the synths don’t have to. There’s a key change in the final chorus that’s the oldest trick in pop songwriting and got me anyway, because it always does. This is mainstream to its core and I’m not going to pretend otherwise. But there’s a reason this formula persists — when the vocal is this committed, the giant drop stops...

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    • ILMA - Since That Day
      1 min read

      ILMA - Since That Day

      There’s a specific kind of electronic track built entirely around one moment of release, and Since That Day spends its whole runtime earning a single drop. ILMA holds the tension almost too long: the build from 1:10 keeps stacking layers, a vocal chop, a rising synth, a filter creeping open, until you’re basically begging for it, and then at 1:48 it finally breaks and the wait pays off completely. This is patient music in an impatient genre. A lesser producer drops the beat thirty seconds earlier and kills the whole effect stone dead. The melody itself is nursery-rhyme simple, which is exactly why it sticks; I had it looping in my head for hours after one listen and couldn’t shake it. Nothing flashy, no attempt to reinvent anything, just really well-judged tension and release from someone who understands that the payoff only lands if the setup hurts a little. That’s...

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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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