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    • Sonatine - To Sunrise
      1 min read

      Sonatine - To Sunrise

      Three Anjunadeep cuts in one batch because the label is on an absolute heater right now. To Sunrise from Sonatine is named perfectly, because it sounds exactly like the last hour of a night that’s bled into morning. It’s that euphoric-but-exhausted deep house feeling, where the melody is reaching for something hopeful while the groove keeps your tired legs moving anyway. Sonatine builds it gradually, layering warm pads under a melodic lead that slowly blooms into the kind of moment that gives festival sunrise sets their whole reputation. There’s no big stupid drop, just a steady emotional climb that respects your intelligence. Anjunadeep specializes in exactly this, the soundtrack to the comedown that feels more like a sunrise than a crash. I could listen to this lane all day, which is probably why the label has three spots in this week’s posts. To Sunrise earns its name honestly. Save it...

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    • Spinnin' Sessions Radio - Episode #682
      1 min read

      Spinnin' Sessions Radio - Episode #682

      Okay, this one’s a bit different, it’s a full episode of Spinnin’ Sessions rather than a single track, but sometimes you just want an hour of someone else doing the work of finding the bangers. Spinnin’ Records has its fingers in basically every corner of mainstream dance music, and their radio show is a decent pulse-check on where the commercial end of the scene is heading. Episode 682 rolls through a parade of big-room drops, festival-ready vocal hooks, plus the occasional left-field pick that reminds you they didn’t get this big by being totally predictable. I won’t pretend every track is essential, that’s not how these mixes work. But as background fuel for a workout or a long drive, it does the job better than most algorithmic playlists. There’s something nice about a human curating the flow instead of a recommendation engine. Stick it on, let it run, and bookmark...

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    • SPORTMODE - Circles
      1 min read

      SPORTMODE - Circles

      Trap Nation surfaced SPORTMODE’s Circles and it’s a clean reminder that melodic trap still has plenty of life left in it. The track rides that sweet spot where the beat hits heavy but the melody keeps everything emotional, with a vocal looping the kind of hook that mirrors the going-in-circles feeling baked into the title. SPORTMODE builds real atmosphere in the intro before the bass drops in and gives it weight, and the contrast between the airy top end and the heavy low end is where the whole thing lives. Trap Nation has surfaced a frankly absurd number of careers, and the channel still has a good ear for tracks that hit emotionally and not just hard. Circles isn’t reinventing anything, but it executes a familiar idea with enough care that it stands out from the endless feed of soundalikes. The drop has just enough bounce to keep it from...

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    • SONNIY - RED LINE
      1 min read

      SONNIY - RED LINE

      SONNIY landing on STMPD RCRDS with “RED LINE” is a strong look, because Martin Garrix’s label doesn’t hand out releases to just anyone. This is a punchy, bass-driven house track that keeps things lean and dancefloor-focused from the jump. The groove is tight and relentless, built around a hooky vocal chop that worms its way into your head almost immediately. There’s a modern, slightly aggressive edge to the production that separates it from politer house fare, the bassline practically growling underneath. I love that it doesn’t overstay its welcome, every section doing its job before moving on. It’s the sort of track that fills a dancefloor without anyone needing to know the artist’s name. STMPD has quietly become one of the most consistent labels for this exact brand of forward-thinking house. SONNIY is clearly a name worth filing away. Stick it on loud, let the bass do its thing, and...

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    • 5 min read

      Critical Music, Explained: Kasra's Quiet Empire

      'Critical music' isn't a genre, it's a drum and bass label run by Kasra for 20+ years. Enei, Ivy Lab, Mefjus — how it built them.
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    • 1 min read

      The Drop Is Buffering

      The Drop Is Buffering

      Headliner’s whole “live set” is one laptop and it just hit the spinning beachball. Crowd’s still going off. Nobody’s clocked that the music stopped.

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    • SVDDEN DEATH & Phiso - Nightshade
      1 min read

      SVDDEN DEATH & Phiso - Nightshade

      SVDDEN DEATH and Phiso on the same track is basically a dare. These are two of the most respected names in heavy dubstep, the kind of producers other producers study, and Nightshade is them flexing exactly why. Phiso made one of the most sampled drops in modern dubstep history with Jurassic, and SVDDEN DEATH built an entire VOYD universe out of sounds this aggressive. Together they go straight for the throat. The sound design is genuinely impressive, all these shifting metallic growls that feel engineered to a frightening degree of precision. There’s a darkness running through it that earns the name, less about being evil for show and more about pure controlled violence in the low end. I keep rewinding the second drop because there’s a switch-up buried in there that I did not see coming. This is heavy music made by people who clearly love heavy music, which is...

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    • SOLAH & Break - Forever (Live Rooftop Session)
      1 min read

      SOLAH & Break - Forever (Live Rooftop Session)

      Hospital Records putting out a live rooftop session of SOLAH and Break’s “Forever” is the kind of thing that reminds you drum and bass is a living, breathing performance genre, not just a studio product. Hearing this one played live gives it a warmth and looseness that a polished master sometimes sanitizes out. SOLAH’s vocal soars over Break’s signature deep, soulful production, and the rooftop setting adds this golden-hour atmosphere you can practically feel through the speakers. Break has been one of the most respected names in the scene for decades, and his restraint is the whole point, he never overplays his hand. There’s something special about watching a song you love get re-contextualized in a live setting, all the little imperfections making it more human. The crowd energy bleeds into the recording in the best way. It’s a gorgeous, soulful moment captured well. Stick it on as the sun...

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    • Nico Szabo & Aske Izan - Aside (feat. SAM SHI)
      1 min read

      Nico Szabo & Aske Izan - Aside (feat. SAM SHI)

      Second Nico Szabo and Aske Izan track in this batch, this time with SAM SHI on vocals, and Aside shows a softer more song-shaped side of the duo. Where Paranoid was all tension, Aside opens up into something warmer and more emotional, with SAM SHI’s vocal floating over that signature Anjunadeep haze. The deep house framework is still here, the patient groove and the careful textures, but the vocal gives it a center of gravity that pulls everything toward the heart instead of the dancefloor. This is the kind of track that works as well on a quiet drive as it does in a club at the right hour. Anjunadeep has always understood that deep house can be a feeling and not just a function, and Aside leans into that fully. Two posts from these two in one week and I’m not mad about it, because the range between the...

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    • 1 min read

      Uptempo: 200 BPM was the floor, not the ceiling

      Uptempo is what happens when hardcore decides that slowing down is for cowards. It’s the fastest, most aggressive corner of the Defqon.1 site, kicks distorted past the point of melody, and the crowd that shows up for it knew exactly what it was signing up for. A couple weeks out, here’s where the speed lives.

      1. Riot Shift - RUNNIN

      Riot Shift has turned into one of the sharper names in this lane, and “RUNNIN,” out in October, is relentless in the way the title promises.

      2. N-Vitral presents BOMBSQUAD & Dimitri K - Energy Drink

      The BOMBSQUAD alias is N-Vitral at his most unhinged. “Energy Drink” is accurate branding and not much of an exaggeration.

      3....

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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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