Revealed Recordings remains Hardwell’s house of relentlessly upbeat festival fuel, and JUNIVERZ and BOSEP fit that brief without sounding like every other Revealed clone. “Energy” is named with zero subtlety and honestly I respect that. The track does precisely what the title promises and then a little more. There’s a euphoric main-stage build that you can already picture exploding over a crowd, but the drop has a slightly harder, more aggressive bite than the usual Revealed gloss, which is what saves it from being forgettable. I’m not always in the mood for this much pure sugar, but when I am, this hits the exact spot. It’s the audio equivalent of a double espresso before a workout. No deep emotional revelations here and that’s completely fine, because not every track needs to make you cry. Some just need to make you move, and this one drags you off the couch by...
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June 07, 2026 at 10:49 AM
1 min read
JUNIVERZ & BOSEP - Energy
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June 07, 2026 at 10:15 AM
1 min read
SubDocta - Iced Up VIP
Read more . . . →WAKAAN is one of those labels where you never quite know what you’re getting genre-wise, but the quality control is high enough that it doesn’t matter. SubDocta’s Iced Up VIP takes whatever the original version of Iced Up was and does something weirder and more interesting with it. The production here is genuinely strange — there are moments where it sounds like it’s going to resolve into something familiar and then veers off somewhere else entirely. Experimental bass as a genre description is almost uselessly broad, but in this case it fits: this is bass music that’s still working out what it wants to be, and that’s the appeal. If you need every track to land cleanly in a defined genre box, this will annoy you. If you like feeling slightly lost in good music, this is exactly what you’re looking for. High ceiling on this one. Give it a...
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June 07, 2026 at 9:38 AM
2 min read
This Week on coldplaysucks — May 25–31, 2026
Read more . . . →Sixty-three posts this week, which sounds excessive until you look at the list and realize the music was the one being excessive — we just kept up. DnB showed up like it had a meeting scheduled, trance quietly loaded nine entries while no one was watching, and SubDocta dropped three separate WAKAAN releases inside 72 hours. Not a light week.
Track of the Week
Sub Focus - Elevate (SOTA remix)
SOTA took a solid Sub Focus track and made something better out of it. The bassline sneaks in patient before everything kicks off, and the drop around two minutes is the kind of thing that makes you press play again immediately after. The rare remix that actually improves on the source material rather than just recirculating it. Hospital Records quality, UKF delivery, Sub Focus still untouchable.
The New Drops
Drum & Bass (13 posts) —...
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June 07, 2026 at 7:10 AM
2 min read
This Week on coldplaysucks — May 31 – June 7
Read more . . . →Drum and bass didn’t just win this week, it showed up to everyone else’s set and unplugged the gear. The liquid pile alone could fill a digest, and we still found room for an EDC hangover, a Basement Jaxx remix nobody saw coming, and Sully dropping a whole EP like it’s still 2014. House and the heavy stuff filled in the rest. Annoyingly good week.
Track of the Week
Hybrid Minds - Avalanche
Liquid drum and bass gets written off as dinner-party background by people who have clearly never heard it loud. “Avalanche” is the rebuttal — the vocal sits in that bittersweet zone Hybrid Minds basically own, then the bassline rolls out smooth enough to ride for ten minutes and never get bored. Warm and heavy at the same time, which is harder to pull off than it sounds. Listen →
The New Drops
Drum &...
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June 07, 2026 at 6:51 AM
1 min read
He Flew to Moscow to Ask Permission
Read more . . . →The manosphere’s hardest man spent this week in Moscow. Andrew Tate — the guy who sells teenage boys a religion of never needing anyone’s approval — showed up at Putin’s economic forum visibly looking for some. He was reportedly invited to promote “Christian values,” which is a choice, given that he’s a Muslim convert under criminal investigation for sex crimes in two countries. He got the bread-and-salt welcome, posted a folk-dance video to his timeline, and drew a grand total of three fans outside his hotel after his people promised a swarm.
Here’s the part the algorithm won’t push to your feed: even the Russians think he’s a clown. The criticism came from every direction at once — Kremlin critics, state-TV regulars, and the pro-war nationalist bloggers who normally throw a parade when some Westerner flies in to kiss the ring. One of the biggest war channels called the Tate...
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June 07, 2026 at 5:07 AM
1 min read
Horyzon - Sky Blue
Read more . . . →Dirty Workz hardstyle and it’s doing exactly what hardstyle is supposed to do — kick drums that feel like a bad decision and a melody that makes you think it was worth it. Horyzon’s been putting in work in the hardstyle space and this is the proof.
More like this
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June 06, 2026 at 10:06 PM
1 min read
Gracie Van Brunt - HOURGLASS
Read more . . . →Gracie Van Brunt on Monstercat with this DnB-flavored electronic thing that has no right being this good. The title track energy is real — feels like something ticking down toward a drop that keeps getting delayed just long enough to make you anxious.
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June 06, 2026 at 8:21 PM
1 min read
Ghosts - lose you
Read more . . . →Searching “Ghosts” on any streaming platform is a nightmare, so good luck, but the hunt is worth it for “lose you.” This is melodic electronic music with one foot in indie-pop and one foot on the dancefloor, and it never fully commits to either, which turns out to be the whole charm. The vocal is fragile in a way that feels real rather than performed for TikTok. Around the halfway mark the beat drops in and suddenly the sad little bedroom song becomes something you could actually move to, without losing the heartbreak underneath. That balance is deceptively tricky and most producers fumble it badly. Ghosts nail it on what sounds like their first or second real release. There’s a wobble in the production, a slightly unpolished edge, and I hope they never sand it off because it’s the human fingerprint that makes the track. Quietly one of my favorite...
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June 06, 2026 at 5:23 PM
1 min read
Gardna & Shapes - Snakes & Ladders
Read more . . . →Shogun Audio DnB with Gardna doing the MC thing and it actually works. “Snakes & Ladders” has that UK bass music grit that the label’s been putting out for years — sounds like it was made by people who actually go to raves, not just make music for them.
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June 06, 2026 at 4:41 PM
1 min read
Flux Pavilion - U Want Me
Read more . . . →Flux Pavilion has been around long enough that some of you reading this were in diapers when “Bass Cannon” came out, and yet here he is, still making a drop feel like a personal attack. “U Want Me” reminds you why dubstep got big in the first place, back before everyone decided it was cringe to admit they liked it. The vocal hook is simple and a little bratty, which is exactly the right call. Then the low end shows up and flattens everything in the room. I played this at a normal volume once and immediately felt stupid, so I turned it up and felt correct. There’s a confidence here that newer producers keep trying to fake and can’t, because they didn’t spend a decade learning where to put the silence right before the hit lands. Flux knows. This is grown-up dubstep that still wants to break your speakers,...
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June 07, 2026 at 10:49 AM
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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acts we have formally banned from the blog
- Coldplay the whole point
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- Imagine Dragons stadium opera for spotify ads
- Mumford & Sons foot-stomp inflation
- Nickelback self-explanatory
- Justin Bieber see Aug 17 2010
- Train soft rock war crime
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