Five days out. This is the part of the run-up where the packing lists appear and the Mainstage anthems start doing laps in your head at 3am. Two records built for the exact moment the fireworks go off over the castle: 1. Hardwell - Spaceman The 2012 anthem that basically invented the modern Tomorrowland mainstage drop. That siren lead is pure adrenaline and the build is engineered to launch an entire field off the ground on the same beat. Hardwell is back on the bill this year stepping in for Guetta on the second Friday, and this is the one the crowd will demand. 2. Martin Garrix & Bebe Rexha - In the Name of Love Garrix’s pivot from festival firework to actual songwriting, and the moment his sets stopped being only about drops. That chorus is enormous and slightly sad, which is exactly why it works at the end...
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July 12, 2026 at 9:33 AM
1 min read
Five days to Tomorrowland: the anthems doing laps in your head
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   electronic house seasonal
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July 12, 2026 at 7:31 AM
2 min read
This Week on coldplaysucks — July 5–12
Read more . . . →Sixty-odd tracks went up over the last week and the house crowd quietly ran the table, though drum and bass and dubstep were right behind it swinging. The recurring theme was old songs getting dragged somewhere they didn’t ask to go: a 1997 trance anthem turned into a trap crime scene, a 1972 afrobeat staple rebuilt as a peak-time house workout, and Vicetone’s “Nevada” flipped twice by two different people in the same seven days. If you like a producer robbing the past and getting away with it, this was your week. Track of the Week Da Hool - Meet Her at the Loveparade (Hex Cougar Remix) “Meet Her at the Loveparade” is older than a chunk of the people who’ll hear this, and Hex Cougar leaves that famous riff almost untouched — dun, dun-dun-dun — right up until 1:22, when the drop opens underneath it like a garbage truck...
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July 12, 2026 at 7:27 AM
1 min read
They're Boiling You Slowly So You Don't Notice
Read more . . . →The New York Fed just described, in polite economist language, a scam being run on you in real time. Companies are done eating Trump’s tariffs. They’re passing the cost to you — but not all at once, because a sudden jump would make you angry and paying attention. Instead they’re doing it a few cents at a time, month after month, a strategy the Fed’s own people call “trickle up.” Corporate America has a friendlier name for it internally: boil the frog. Turn the heat up so gradually the frog never jumps out of the pot. You’re the frog. The pot is your grocery bill. Here’s the part that should end the argument. Nearly 90% of the tariff cost last year landed on American companies and shoppers, not the foreign countries Trump swore would pay. And the burden isn’t even split evenly — the poorest fifth of households got hit...
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July 11, 2026 at 8:47 PM
1 min read
XIRA - Feel (J Ribbon Remix)
Read more . . . →That voice, XIRA’s, all breath and ache, is the kind of thing Anjunabeats built an empire on, and J Ribbon’s remix knows it, keeping her front and center while rebuilding everything underneath. Feel gets pulled toward the proggier, driving end of trance here: a rolling bassline under a breakdown that goes properly euphoric around 2:15 before the beat crashes back in and resets your pulse. Anjuna remixes can tip into formula, the same emotional-build-to-big-drop template stamped over and over until you can predict every move, but this one has a bassline with enough character to carry the between-sections stretches that usually sag. XIRA’s voice does the heavy lifting and the production has the good sense to trust it rather than pile synths on top. It’s music for one specific feeling, that overwhelmed, slightly teary moment when a set peaks and you briefly forget you have a body. It hits that...
- This entry was posted in:   progressive trance trance
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July 11, 2026 at 5:20 PM
1 min read
Vluarr - Steppin'
Read more . . . →The vocal chop in Steppin’ hits like a hiccup on the offbeat and immediately makes the track impossible to sit still through. Vluarr works the bass-house end of things, and this is a lean, mean little groove: no wasted sounds, just a bouncing bassline, that stuttered vocal, and a drop at 1:00 that arrives fast and gets straight to business. House this functional can feel anonymous, faceless festival filler you forget by the next track, but Steppin’ has enough personality in that one hook to actually stand out on a big system. It’s built for a specific job, making a room move at midnight, and it does that job without a wasted second or a breakdown nobody asked for. I appreciate a producer who knows exactly what a track is for and refuses to pad it out chasing some emotional moment the song was never about. Three minutes of pure...
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July 11, 2026 at 1:24 PM
1 min read
Vicetone - Nevada (Drum & Bass Mix)
Read more . . . →Nevada soundtracked roughly ten thousand gaming montages back in 2016, so a drum and bass remix of it could easily have been a lazy nostalgia cash-in. This lands on the smart side instead. Speeding the vocal up and dropping it onto a rolling break gives that impossibly catchy chorus somewhere new to go, and it turns out the melody was always built for more tempo than the original ever gave it. The drop at 1:30 hits harder than the four-on-the-floor version did, because the breakbeat lends it a forward motion the older arrangement never had. It’s cheesy, obviously; Nevada was always cheese, gloriously so, and putting it at DnB tempo just makes it a better party. I caught myself grinning by the second chorus and stopped fighting it. Sometimes the obvious remix is the right one, the idea so on-the-nose that nobody bothered until someone finally did it properly. This...
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July 11, 2026 at 10:30 AM
1 min read
The Tomorrowland bass stages exist to rearrange your organs
Read more . . . →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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July 11, 2026 at 9:34 AM
1 min read
The Weeknd & Playboi Carti - Timeless (RemK Remix)
Read more . . . →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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July 11, 2026 at 7:10 AM
1 min read
Yere - Special
Read more . . . →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...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic melodic
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July 11, 2026 at 6:30 AM
1 min read
One Day Out, Four Days Locked Out
Read more . . . →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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July 12, 2026 at 9:33 AM
1 min read
Editor's picks
Raise Your Weapon
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Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2
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