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    • LÖVI - Virtual Love 2001
      1 min read

      LÖVI - Virtual Love 2001

      There’s a very specific kind of nostalgia that only works if you commit to it completely, and Virtual Love 2001 commits hard. LÖVI leans all the way into early-2000s trance-pop signifiers, the supersaw stabs and the slightly cheesy vocal hook, and somehow it reads as sincere rather than ironic. That sincerity is the reason it works on me. The melody at the chorus is the kind of thing that would have been a Eurodance radio smash twenty years ago, and hearing it now feels like finding a mixtape you forgot you made. NCS catches a lot of flak for being playlist filler, but every so often something genuinely charming slips through their pipeline and this is one of those. The production is cleaner than the era it’s referencing ever managed, which is sort of the point of a throwback done right. It won’t change your life and it isn’t trying...

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    • LAR - Rewind
      1 min read

      LAR - Rewind

      LAR has a real feel for the slow burn, and Rewind is patient in a way that pays off if you actually let it. It’s deep house built for the small hours — hypnotic, understated, far more interested in groove and texture than in any big dramatic moment. The hook works by repetition, looping just long enough to lodge itself somewhere behind your eyes before a subtle shift quietly pulls you forward. The Anjunadeep world is the obvious home for this kind of restrained, atmospheric thing, and LAR fits the brief without ever sounding interchangeable with the rest of the roster. There’s a warmth to the low end that keeps it from feeling cold or clinical the way a lot of minimal deep house drifts into. This is music for the part of the night when the lights are low and nobody’s checking the time anymore. Smooth, immersive, and best...

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    • 1 min read

      PECO Made $814 Million. Its Workers Are Striking on the Fourth of July.

      For the first time in more than a hundred years, the people who keep the lights on in Philadelphia are walking off the job. At 12:01 AM on July 4, roughly 1,600 PECO workers — the linemen and gas techs who climb the poles in the storms you’re hiding from — go on strike. They’re not asking for a yacht. They want pay that matches what the same job earns at every other utility, and an end to a two-tier retirement scheme that quietly shortchanges anyone hired after some arbitrary cutoff. PECO’s answer, across five months of talking, was a shrug dressed up as a 20% raise stretched over the whole contract. Here’s the part that should make you throw something. PECO cleared $814 million in profit last year — up almost 48%. It booked another $278 million in the first quarter of 2026 alone. Exelon, the parent company, handed...

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    • Mesto - Listen To Me
      1 min read

      Mesto - Listen To Me

      Mesto has been refining this bright, bouncy strain of house for years and Listen To Me might be the most fully realised version yet. The man has a gift for melodies that feel like sunlight, and this one rides a plucky lead that’s almost annoyingly catchy before the vocal even arrives. There’s a future-bounce snap to the drop, that signature rubber-band rhythm he helped popularise alongside Brooks and Mike Williams back in the day, and it still sounds fresh because he keeps tightening the screws on it. What gets me is how effortless the whole thing sounds, like the track always existed and he just transcribed it. The vocal hook is the kind of thing you’ll be humming against your will by the second chorus. It’s relentlessly positive in a way that could read as saccharine from a lesser producer, but Mesto sells it because he clearly means it. Not...

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    • AK & Sublab - Be Mine
      1 min read

      AK & Sublab - Be Mine

      Sublab makes some of the most physically satisfying low end in this whole melodic-bass world, and Be Mine is another reminder of why his name on a track means something specific. Paired with AK, the result is deep and weighty without ever turning aggressive — the sub doesn’t hit you so much as it surrounds you and settles in your chest. The vocal floats up top, processed just enough to feel like a memory of a voice rather than the thing itself. It’s the kind of track that rewards a real subwoofer or a decent pair of headphones and gives almost nothing away on a phone speaker, so judge it accordingly. There’s a meditative quality to how it unfolds, patient and unhurried, that I find genuinely calming after a long day. Deep, warm, and quietly emotional, it’s late-night driving music far more than dancefloor fuel, and it knows it. File...

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    • Michael Gray - Universe
      1 min read

      Michael Gray - Universe

      Michael Gray has been making disco-flecked house since before a lot of today’s tech house producers owned their first laptop, and Universe shows the veteran still knows exactly where the groove lives. This leans more classic and filtered than the Toolroom norm, a warm four-to-the-floor pulse with a vocal sample that loops with real soul. The man made “The Weekend” back in 2004, a record that still gets played at weddings and warehouse parties alike, and there’s a through-line of that same feel-good DNA here. It’s less about the drop and more about the steady hypnotic build, the way good disco-house keeps cooking until you realise you’ve been moving for six minutes straight. The bassline has that round, bouncing quality the modern stuff often files down too sharp. A string stab comes in around the three-minute mark and lifts the whole thing into euphoria without ever getting cheesy about it....

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    • Armin van Buuren & Adam Beyer - No Mercy (Live @ Coachella 2026)
      1 min read

      Armin van Buuren & Adam Beyer - No Mercy (Live @ Coachella 2026)

      On paper, a trance institution and one of techno’s most respected purists sharing a Coachella stage shouldn’t work, which is exactly why No Mercy is so fascinating. Armin van Buuren and Adam Beyer come from opposite ends of dance music’s class system, and this live cut is the sound of them meeting somewhere in the middle — the relentless mechanical drive of techno fused with the unapologetic emotional sweep trance never gave up on. The live recording carries an energy a sterile studio version would have sanded right off, complete with a crowd that clearly couldn’t quite believe what it was watching happen. It’s the kind of collaboration that reads as a marketing stunt right up until you actually hear it click into place. Whether you turned up a trance head or a techno snob, there’s something in here built specifically to win you over and quietly embarrass your purism....

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    • House Music Started Because Disco Got Murdered
      6 min read

      House Music Started Because Disco Got Murdered

      House music didn't get invented, it got improvised — Frankie Knuckles, Chicago, the 303, and how disco's murder accidentally built a religion.
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    • Clüb De Combat - All The Single Ladies (Extended Mix)
      1 min read

      Clüb De Combat - All The Single Ladies (Extended Mix)

      Flipping one of the most recognisable pop hooks of the century is a high-wire act, and Clüb De Combat mostly stick the landing. The Single Ladies line gets chopped and reframed inside a proper, four-to-the-floor house groove, which is exactly the kind of cheeky, dancefloor-first move the Defected world exists to bless. The extended mix gives it room to actually build, so the payoff when the vocal drops in lands harder than a radio edit ever would. It’s unapologetically fun, the kind of track a DJ pulls out when they want the whole room grinning and a little embarrassed about it at the same time. In lesser hands this tips into pure novelty and dies after one play, but the groove underneath is legitimately solid, and that’s what saves it. The trick with a sample this famous is making people dance instead of just pointing in recognition, and this clears...

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    • miirabelle, Stadiumx - Pongo
      1 min read

      miirabelle, Stadiumx - Pongo

      The bassline on Pongo struts in around the thirty-second mark and immediately owns the room, and from there miirabelle and Stadiumx barely have to do anything but let it ride. This is tech house built on attitude, a vocal that swaggers more than it sings sitting over a low end with real menace to it. The drop doesn’t explode so much as sidle up and start moving, which is a harder and frankly cooler thing to pull off than a big obvious payoff. There’s a percussion fill around the 2:10 mark that snaps the whole groove into a higher gear, the kind of detail that separates producers who feel tech house from producers who just program it. miirabelle’s vocal presence is the secret weapon, giving the track a face instead of leaving it another faceless DJ tool. It’s sexy and a little smug and completely aware of how good it...

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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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