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    • Joel Corry - Whisper
      1 min read

      Joel Corry - Whisper

      Joel Corry is a producer I want to dislike on principle, and “Whisper” keeps ruining that plan. The man makes chart-house engineered in a lab for maximum radio penetration, and yet the hook here burrows in within one listen and refuses to leave. It’s built around a breathy vocal sample that gives the track its name, looped over a piano-house bounce that would sound at home in 1994 and on daytime radio tomorrow morning. There’s zero risk in it and I weirdly respect the sheer efficiency; every element is there to make you move, nothing is there by accident. The drop at 1:05 is almost insultingly simple, just that whispered vocal and a four-on-the-floor kick, and it works on me every single time like a cheat code. I’ve caught myself humming it in the shower, which is the only chart metric that actually means anything. It isn’t art and doesn’t...

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    • 1 min read

      Tomorrowland is in Belgium and the locals still run the place

      Reminder that Tomorrowland happens in Boom, a Belgian town of about 18,000 that swells to festival-sized every July and then goes quiet again. The polite thing is to respect the home team, and Belgium’s dance roster punches so far above the country’s weight it’s almost unfair. Four locals worth your time, running from radio-friendly to genuinely frightening. 1. Lost Frequencies - Are You With Me Felix De Laet was still a teenager when this became the first Belgian track to top the UK singles chart. It’s a country sample turned into a sunset anthem, and it should be corny, but the restraint saves it. You’ll hear it at least twice on site whether you asked for it or not. 2. Netsky - Rio Belgium does drum and bass too, and Netsky is the friendly face of it. Rio is all momentum and holiday-brochure optimism, the kind of track that somehow...

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    • 1 min read

      400 Companies Begged His Trade Office for a Break. That's the Confession.

      Trump has spent his whole second term telling you tariffs are a tax on China, on Europe, on whoever the villain is that week — the bill lands on foreigners, never on you. That’s the load-bearing lie of the entire project. So here’s the part he’d rather you skip: when his trade office opened the floor for public comment on the newest round, more than 400 companies wrote in, and almost every one of them was begging to be let off the hook. Ford. The electrical manufacturers. The people who import cigars. Nobody writes a panicked letter asking to be spared from a tax that somebody else is paying. That’s the whole tell. Ford isn’t up at night worried China is about to eat a cost — Ford is worried Ford is, and that it gets passed straight down to the guy financing a pickup. The cigar lobby said the...

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    • Heirloom - Oh Don't Tell (Live from Bush Hall, London)
      1 min read

      Heirloom - Oh Don't Tell (Live from Bush Hall, London)

      A live band recording on Anjunadeep is the last thing I expected to be my favourite find this week, and yet here we are. “Oh Don’t Tell” was captured at Bush Hall in London and you can actually hear the room in it — the slight bloom on the vocal, the way the bass guitar breathes instead of loops. Heirloom sit in this hazy space between electronic and live indie where the drum machine and a real kit seem to be having a quiet conversation. The song itself is a slow-burn heartbreak thing, all restraint and held tension, and the live setting strips away any studio gloss that might have softened it. There’s a moment near the end where the singer’s voice cracks slightly on a held note and nobody fixed it in post, thank god, because that crack is the whole song. This is the sort of record that...

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    • Flux Pavilion x Liquid Stranger x AHEE - Move Your Body
      1 min read

      Flux Pavilion x Liquid Stranger x AHEE - Move Your Body

      I did not expect a Flux Pavilion collab in 2026 to sound this hungry. “Move Your Body” is three producers who could easily coast trading blows instead, and the seams show in the best way — you can hear one of them dare the next to go weirder. The vocal hook is a single looped command chopped into confetti, and by the second drop it’s been mangled into something that barely reads as a word anymore. Liquid Stranger’s fingerprints are all over the low mids, that rubbery detuned wobble that sounds like a didgeridoo having a bad day. There’s a breakdown near 2:20 where everything falls to a heartbeat pulse and one lone vocal chirp, and the tension before it kicks back in is almost mean. Flux has been chasing the ghost of “Bass Cannon” for over a decade and this is the closest he’s come to topping it. Big,...

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    • Is the Superstar DJ Era Over? Yeah, and Good Riddance
      4 min read

      Is the Superstar DJ Era Over? Yeah, and Good Riddance

      The superstar DJ era is over and good riddance. How the press-play frontman lost to Boiler Room, collectives, and amapiano. Yes, we're talking about the cake.
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    • Clockvice & Vorso - DUMFUK
      1 min read

      Clockvice & Vorso - DUMFUK

      The first drop of “DUMFUK” lands at 0:52 and it genuinely sounds like a server rack falling down a stairwell. Clockvice and Vorso have made something almost aggressively stupid in the best possible way — a Monstercat dubstep cut with zero interest in melody, mood, or your comfort. It’s all texture and impact, growls layered so thick they start to sound organic, like a large animal that is very much not okay. There’s a rhythmic stutter in the second half where the bass gets chopped into a triplet pattern and the whole track briefly turns into a machine gun. I don’t reach for riddim like this often because a lot of it is just noise cosplaying as heaviness, but these two actually arrange the chaos so it goes somewhere. The title is honest marketing. You’re not meant to think during this; you’re meant to make a face. It’s dumb in...

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    • The one genuinely new thing at Tomorrowland this year
      1 min read

      The one genuinely new thing at Tomorrowland this year

      Here’s the actual news out of this year’s lineup, buried under the headliner circus: on opening Friday, Tomorrowland is running its first full afro house day at the Melodia stage. Not one token DJ shoved into an afternoon slot, a whole bill of South African producers who’ve spent years turning drum patterns into something closer to church. If you only know this festival as big-room fireworks, this is the corner worth walking to. 1. Caiiro - The Akan Caiiro builds tracks like they’re supposed to run twenty minutes, and you resent it when they don’t. The Akan is all rolling toms and a synth line that keeps threatening to resolve and refuses. Put it on a real system and the low end sits right in your sternum. 2. Da Capo - Umbovukazi Seven-plus minutes and it earns every one. Da Capo lets the groove breathe for ages before the vocal...

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    • 1 min read

      Citi Paid Fraser $42 Million to Cut 20,000 Jobs

      Jane Fraser is running Citigroup through the biggest layoff in its modern history — 20,000 jobs on the chopping block, 7,000 already gone — and the board handed her a 22% raise for it. Forty-two million dollars for 2025. The reorganization that emptied those desks is the same reorganization her pay package rewards. She didn’t get paid despite the cuts. She got paid for them. Here’s the part nobody says out loud: at the top, mass firing is a resume line. Every worker she cut was a number that made a slide look better, and the slide is what the compensation committee reads. The people who lost their health insurance in the “modernization” don’t get a modernization bonus. They get a severance letter and a LinkedIn post about being open to work. Twenty thousand households absorbing the hit so one household can clear forty-two million. That’s not a company in...

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    • Charles D x TMPR x Inner City - Good Life
      1 min read

      Charles D x TMPR x Inner City - Good Life

      Rebooting Inner City's untouchable Good Life is a bold swing. Charles D x TMPR mostly get away with it, keeping Paris Grey's vocal front and centre.
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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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