That’s a four-name pileup on the credits, and normally a “vs” track with that many cooks in the kitchen ends up as mush, but “Activated” is lean and mean in a way that surprised me. PIEM and SLM bring the modern tech-house chassis while the DJ Technics and Kotton The Cutie side drags in some genuine Baltimore club DNA, and the collision is sharper than the metadata suggests. The “I just wanna” vocal does that thing where a chopped phrase becomes more hypnotic the more it repeats, until you stop hearing words and just hear rhythm. The drums hit with that snappy club bounce, all stuttered kicks and breath samples, and the house low end keeps it grounded for a normal dancefloor instead of a niche one. I keep coming back to how much restraint is in the arrangement. It could’ve been cluttered and it just isn’t. Defected pulling Baltimore...
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June 25, 2026 at 2:36 PM
1 min read
PIEM & SLM vs DJ Technics & Kotton The Cutie - Activated (I Just Wanna)
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   club house tech house
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June 25, 2026 at 11:14 AM
1 min read
Ookay, Veronica Bravo - dontwakemeup
Read more . . . →Ookay will forever be the “Thief” guy to a lot of people, that one inescapable 2016 record, and the funny thing is he’s spent the years since quietly being a much more interesting producer than that single suggests. “dontwakemeup” pairs him with Veronica Bravo, and it’s a moodier, more emotional take on trap than the genre’s reputation for chest-beating would lead you to expect. The all-lowercase no-spaces title is doing some heavy lifting, signaling the bedroom-pop melancholy threaded through what’s underneath. Bravo’s vocal is half-asleep in the best way, drifting over a beat that hits hard but never loses its softness. That tension between the heavy low end and the tender topline is the whole appeal, and Ookay threads it without spilling into either corny ballad or generic festival trap. I went in with low expectations because the trap well has been poisoned by years of soundalikes, and this one...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic melodic trap
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June 25, 2026 at 7:03 AM
1 min read
The second name on the track is quietly stealing Defqon from the headliners
Read more . . . →Two days. Everyone buys the ticket for the names in the biggest font, fair enough. But the most interesting hardstyle right now is happening in the feature credits. The second name on the track, the kid a veteran pulled in because they heard something the rest of us hadn’t. By next summer half of these are headlining their own slots. Here’s who to clock before that happens. 1. Primeshock & Cryex - Higher Rush Cryex keeps showing up on tracks that punch above their billing, and this is a clean example. Primeshock bring the polish, Cryex brings the edge that keeps it from going soft. The handshake works. 2. Primeshock & NLCK - Speedrun The title is a warning. NLCK pushes the tempo and the whole thing feels like it’s trying to outrun itself. The good kind of restless. You can hear someone young in the room who hasn’t learned...
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June 25, 2026 at 7:03 AM
1 min read
92% Voted To Stop Building Their Own Replacements
Read more . . . →Hyundai wants 25,000 Boston Dynamics Atlas robots on its own assembly lines by 2028 — the humanoid kind, the ones in the viral clips doing backflips. The company that owns Boston Dynamics plans to build 30,000 of these a year, and most are headed straight for the factories where actual humans currently work. So this week 39,668 of those humans voted, and 92% of them said: strike. They are being asked, very politely, to spend the next two years assembling the machines that will assemble their own pink slips, and they declined. What they want instead is almost quaint. A hundred bucks more a month. A cut of the profit they already made the company last year. And a promise, in writing, that a robot can’t take your job. That last one is the part the executives can’t stomach. They’ll wire you a bonus. They will not sign a sentence...
- This entry was posted in:   automation labor political
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June 24, 2026 at 9:31 PM
1 min read
Matisse & Sadko - Endless Sunrise [Extended Mix]
Read more . . . →Matisse & Sadko have been Martin Garrix’s go-to collaborators for so long that people forget they’re genuinely excellent on their own, and “Endless Sunrise” is a reminder that the Russian duo can build a progressive house cathedral without anyone holding their hand. This is the extended mix, which is the only way to actually hear what they’re doing, because the radio edit chops out exactly the patient build that makes the payoff land. The intro takes its time, layering pads and a plucked melody until you almost forget a drop is coming, and then it arrives wide and golden like the title promises. I have a soft spot for this kind of festival progressive even though it’s deeply unfashionable to admit it in 2026. There’s craft here that the cool kids pretend not to notice. The melody is the kind that lodges in your head on the drive home, and...
- This entry was posted in:   big room electronic progressive house
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June 24, 2026 at 4:48 PM
1 min read
Love Revolution - Give It To Me Baby
Read more . . . →Anytime someone reaches for “Give It To Me Baby” you’re walking into Rick James’s house and you’d better wipe your feet, because that 1981 groove is one of the most perfect basslines ever committed to tape. Love Revolution clearly know the assignment and don’t try to out-funk the original, they just give it a clean dancefloor chassis and let the source material do the seducing. The result is a feel-good house edit that’s about as subtle as a disco ball to the face, and honestly that’s the appeal. Some nights you don’t want nuance, you want a groove that’s been making people lose their minds for forty years dressed up for a modern club. The four-on-the-floor sits politely under that immortal hook, and the production is bright and uncomplicated. Is it essential? No. Will it work the second it comes on at a party where everyone’s three drinks deep? Absolutely....
- This entry was posted in:   dance electronic house
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June 24, 2026 at 2:00 PM
4 min read
The Prodigy: The Most Dangerous Band in Dance Music
The Prodigy came out of rave and spent a decade proving they were too violent for it. Why they're the most dangerous band dance music ever made.Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   bsky-posted electronic Featured Articles
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June 24, 2026 at 1:26 PM
1 min read
k?d - breathe (feat. Nevve)
Read more . . . →k?d has spent years building this whole sci-fi mythology around his project, the lost-in-space visuals and the question-mark name, and the funny thing is the music usually backs up the theater. “breathe” pairs him with Nevve, who has quietly sung on half the melodic dance records you’ve loved without ever getting the credit, and she’s the secret weapon again here. The track opens like it’s going to be a gentle one and then the drop arrives with teeth, that crunchy melodic dubstep snarl that k?d does better than almost anyone working right now. What keeps it from being just another loud-soft-loud exercise is the detail in the sound design, little vocal chops and synth flickers buzzing around the edges like static off a screen. Nevve’s hook gives you something human to hold while the production goes full robot around her. I’ve been a sucker for this corner of bass music...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic future bass melodic dubstep
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June 24, 2026 at 10:49 AM
1 min read
KAIVON - To Build A Home
Read more . . . →Naming a track “To Build A Home” sets a bar, because the Cinematic Orchestra song with that title is one of the most quietly devastating pieces of music of the last twenty years, and you do not borrow that title lightly. KAIVON either doesn’t know that or doesn’t care, and weirdly the confidence works in his favor. This is big, open-hearted melodic bass, the kind designed for that moment at a festival when the sun’s going down and ten thousand people decide to feel something at once. The chords are warm, the drop is more emotional than aggressive, and there’s a piano line threaded through it that keeps the whole thing from floating away. I tend to roll my eyes at music this earnest, but KAIVON commits so completely that the cynicism just slides off. He’s not winking at you. He means every swelling synth. The production is glossy without...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic future bass melodic bass
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June 24, 2026 at 7:10 AM
1 min read
WinWel - Until We're Old
Read more . . . →MrSuicideSheep remains the most reliable channel on the internet for finding music that makes you feel things you weren’t planning to feel, and WinWel’s Until We’re Old is a textbook example. This is gorgeous melodic electronic music with a vocal that hits the exact sweet spot between hopeful and heartbroken. The title alone tells you what you’re in for, and the track delivers on the promise. There’s a warmth to the production that a lot of electronic music forgets to chase, all rounded synths and a beat that never tries to dominate the emotion. WinWel understands restraint, which is the rarest skill in this whole scene. The drop, if you can even call it that, is more of a gentle lift than a slam, opening the track up into something that feels like a held breath finally released. I had this on repeat way longer than I’d like to admit....
- This entry was posted in:   electronic melodic
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June 25, 2026 at 2:36 PM
1 min read
Editor's picks
Raise Your Weapon
deadmau5
The transition at 4:00 is the whole point. Coldplay would never.
The One
Swedish House Mafia · Pharrell
Exactly as big and as dumb as it needs to be. Volume up.
The Grudge (live)
Chilly Gonzales
Electronic doesn't have to mean loud. Eleven minutes, all of them.
Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2
Skrillex
Recorded off the booth feed. He played Scary Monsters before it was Scary Monsters.
Paper Romance
Groove Armada
Genre-hopping with a new crew of vocalists. It still works.
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