“DAYDREAM” opens with a plucked arpeggio that could have been lifted straight from 2010-era Armada, and I mean that as a compliment: this is trance that knows exactly what it is and commits fully. SILK and Emie build toward a drop at 1:30 that hits with the big, gated, emotional synth stab the genre lives and dies on, topped with a vocal reaching for the rafters. There’s zero irony here, no attempt to modernise or apologise for the euphoria, and after years of trance trying to be tech-adjacent and cool it’s genuinely refreshing to hear something just go for the feeling. The breakdown in the middle strips back to piano and vocal before the second drop rebuilds the whole cathedral. It’s the kind of track that finds you at 3am at a festival when you’re tired and emotional and it undoes you completely. Trance snobs will call it obvious. The...
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July 19, 2026 at 11:07 AM
1 min read
SILK x Emie - DAYDREAM
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   trance uplifting trance
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July 19, 2026 at 7:49 AM
1 min read
Vicetone - Nevada (Dubstep Remix)
Read more . . . →Somebody took Vicetone’s “Nevada,” a track that soundtracked roughly nine thousand gaming montages back in 2016, and dragged it into a dark alley. This dubstep flip keeps Cozi Zuehlsdorff’s vocal mostly intact through the verse and then obliterates the drop, swapping the original’s shiny festival lift for a filthy half-time wobble. It shouldn’t work — the source is pure sunshine and the remix is pure grime — and yet the contrast is exactly why it does. Hearing that innocent topline lead straight into a bassline this rude is legitimately funny the first time through. The remixer resists the urge to bury the melody, so the nostalgia hit still lands a half-second before the floor gives out. I have a soft spot for edits that take a beloved song and rough it up without disrespecting it, and this one threads it. Whether it improves on the original honestly depends on how...
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July 19, 2026 at 7:26 AM
2 min read
This Week on coldplaysucks — July 12–19
Read more . . . →Thirty-seven tracks went up and the through-line was hard to miss: this was veterans week. Dubstep and bass technically posted the most, but the ones that stuck were old hands doing exactly what they’ve always done, sharper than the field. Photek reappeared out of nowhere, Fred V rang up Ayah Marar, AC Slater dug a rave relic out of the ground — and somewhere under all that, Seven Lions quietly posted twice and nobody blinked. Track of the Week Photek - 30 Seconds Out Photek disappears for years at a stretch and comes back sounding like a sniper cleaning his rifle. “30 Seconds Out” is all tension and negative space — drums mixed so dry you could count the individual hits, and a passage around 1:40 where he pulls almost everything out except a single tom and lets it hang there long enough to make you nervous. The whole scene...
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July 19, 2026 at 7:12 AM
2 min read
This Week on coldplaysucks — July 12–19
Read more . . . →Thirty-seven tracks went up and the through-line was hard to miss: this was veterans week. Dubstep and bass technically posted the most, but the ones that stuck were old hands doing exactly what they’ve always done, sharper than the field. Photek reappeared out of nowhere, Fred V rang up Ayah Marar, AC Slater dug a rave relic out of the ground — and somewhere under all that, Seven Lions quietly posted twice and nobody blinked. Track of the Week Photek - 30 Seconds Out Photek disappears for years at a stretch and comes back sounding like a sniper cleaning his rifle. “30 Seconds Out” is all tension and negative space — drums mixed so dry you could count the individual hits, and a passage around 1:40 where he pulls almost everything out except a single tom and lets it hang there long enough to make you nervous. The whole scene...
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July 19, 2026 at 6:33 AM
1 min read
They're Spreading the Tariff Out So You Won't Notice Who Did It
Read more . . . →The New York Fed just published the part of the tariff story nobody at a podium will read aloud. Ask companies what they’re doing with the bill and 47% of service firms and 44% of manufacturers say the same thing: raising prices, with more to come. But the word that matters in that report isn’t “raising.” It’s how. The Fed calls it “trickle up” — you don’t jack the price all at once, because a jump big enough to notice is a jump big enough to get blamed on. You leak it in. A little on this order, a little on the next, until the tariff has quietly moved from the invoice to your receipt and nobody can point to the day it happened. Put a number on the lag. Fed economists found that when a store’s cost goes up a dollar because of a tariff, that dollar shows up...
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July 18, 2026 at 7:05 PM
1 min read
Tokyo Project & BB Cooper - Silhouette
Read more . . . →The vocal on “Silhouette” comes in almost whispered, so close to the mic you can hear the breath between lines, and that intimacy is what the whole track hangs on. Tokyo Project and BB Cooper have made one of those indie-electronic songs that sounds enormous and lonely at the same time, with big reverby drums, a shimmering synth lead, and a hook that plants itself in your head by the second chorus. CloudKid has quietly become the home for exactly this sound, the melancholy-but-danceable lane, and this is a strong example of why. There’s a drop around 1:50 that trades the expected bass hit for a wash of pitched vocals, which shouldn’t work and completely does. It’s the kind of track that plays over the end credits of a film and makes you sit through them. I’ve had the chorus melody stuck in my head since this morning and I’m...
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July 18, 2026 at 4:11 PM
1 min read
Surf Mesa & Stace Cadet - The Moment (Sunset Mix)
Read more . . . →Surf Mesa has spent his whole career trying to recapture the lightning of “ily,” and “The Moment” is the first time it doesn’t sound like a man chasing his own shadow. Teaming up with Stace Cadet drags him toward a housier, bouncier lane, and the Sunset Mix leans on a warm plucked bassline that practically skips. It’s golden-hour music in the most literal sense — the kind of track that makes a fairly ordinary evening feel briefly cinematic. There’s a filtered breakdown around 2:10 where the drums drop out and one lonely vocal chop just floats, and it’s the closest a big commercial dance record has come to actual grace this year. I’m usually suspicious of anything this obviously designed for a car-commercial sync, and this earns the polish by having a real groove under all the gloss. The vocal is featherlight and I couldn’t recite you a single lyric,...
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July 18, 2026 at 2:22 PM
1 min read
UPxMT - Bang
Read more . . . →“Bang” is a lot more fun than a track this moody has any right to be. UPxMT thread a nervy little synth riff through the whole thing and then keep interrupting it with a drop that stutters and cuts out like a bad connection, and somehow the glitchiness is the hook. It sits in that CloudKid pocket where indie songwriting meets electronic production without either one winning, which is a hard balance and they nail it. The best moment is around 2:10 when everything drops to just the vocal and a single pulsing bass note before the last chorus kicks the door back in. There’s a real song buried in here, not simply a beat with a topline stapled on. The melody would survive being played on an acoustic guitar, which is the test most of this stuff fails. I keep replaying the last thirty seconds. It’s edgy without being...
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July 18, 2026 at 12:31 PM
1 min read
Stacey Pullen - I Wanna Dance (Extended Mix)
Read more . . . →Detroit veterans do not make music for your phone speaker, and Stacey Pullen’s “I Wanna Dance” is a nine-minute reminder of what a record built for a real room feels like. The extended mix takes its sweet time — you’re two and a half minutes in before the vocal even shows up — and that patience is the entire pleasure. Pullen has been doing this since the Belleville days and it shows in how little he panics; the track trusts a single hypnotic groove to carry you, adding a hi-hat here, a filter sweep there, never once begging for attention. The bassline is round and rubbery and sits so deep in the pocket you feel it more than hear it. Somewhere past the six-minute mark it locks into a trance-state loop that I completely lost track of time inside. This is house as meditation, not as content. Modern producers cramming...
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July 18, 2026 at 10:42 AM
1 min read
WHIPPED CREAM - home was always me (remixes)
Read more . . . →What happens when a producer known for absolutely caving your chest in decides to make something soft? WHIPPED CREAM’s “home was always me” gets the remix treatment here, and the whole package leans into the tender side of an artist who usually deals in damage. Caroline Cecil built her name on trap and bass heavy enough to crack a windshield, so hearing these versions unfold into warm, lo-fi, almost weightless territory is a genuine turn. The Monstercat-meets-Chillhop framing tells you the temperature: muted drums, tape hiss, chords that just sort of exhale. There’s a remix in the set where the beat doesn’t fully drop until past the halfway mark, and the restraint is the whole point. It trusts you to sit in the quiet. I had this on doing dishes at midnight and lost ten minutes staring out the window, which is exactly what this kind of thing is for....
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July 19, 2026 at 11:07 AM
1 min read
Editor's picks
Raise Your Weapon
deadmau5
The transition at 4:00 is the whole point. Coldplay would never.
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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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