This one’s a mix, not a single, and that’s exactly why it earns a post. Dirtybird Radio 533 hands the controls to Victoria Rawlins, and an hour-plus in the Dirtybird universe is one of the most reliable ways to get your week moving. Dirtybird has spent years being the funniest weirdest most danceable corner of tech house, all booty-shaking grooves and a flat refusal to take itself seriously, and Rawlins clearly gets the brief. The selection rolls through exactly the kind of low-slung slightly ridiculous house and tech house that makes the label’s parties legendary. A good mix is its own art form, a DJ telling a story with other people’s records, and this one has real flow instead of just stacking bangers on top of each other. Throw it on for a cleaning session, a pre-drink, or a long drive, and let Rawlins steer the whole thing. Dirtybird almost...
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June 16, 2026 at 11:21 AM
1 min read
Dirtybird Radio 533 - Victoria Rawlins
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   dj mixes tech house
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June 16, 2026 at 10:45 AM
1 min read
The Defqon.1 anthem is the one tradition hardstyle got right
Read more . . . →We’re under two weeks out from Defqon.1, which means it’s time to talk about the one piece of festival marketing that actually rules: the yearly anthem. Every June, Q-dance hands one artist the job of summing up the whole weekend in five minutes of kicks and screaming synths, and somehow it keeps landing. Most festival anthems are forgettable. These are the ones people still scream back a decade later. Here’s the through-line from 2011 to last summer. 1. Noisecontrollers - Unite The one that set the template. 2011 Noisecontrollers is pure early-Defqon euphoria, back when the kick still had a bounce to it and nobody had figured out distortion could go this hard. Press play and watch a field of 60,000 people lose it in slow motion. 2. Coone - Survival Of The Fittest Coone took the anthem job in 2014 and turned it into a stadium chant. That spoken-word...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic hardstyle seasonal
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June 16, 2026 at 10:42 AM
1 min read
Chase & Status - BADDADAN (KNOCK2 RMX)
Read more . . . →“BADDADAN” was already one of the biggest UK dance tracks of the last few years, a jungle-meets-everything monster that refused to leave festival sets alone. Now KNOCK2 has dragged it across the Atlantic and rebuilt it for the American bass scene, and the result is a genuinely interesting culture clash. He keeps the iconic vocal chants that make the original go off, then swaps the rolling breakbeat for that hard-hitting KNOCK2 trap bounce. Part of me misses the UK swing of the original, because the jungle energy was half the magic. But this version absolutely demolishes in a different register, built for the kind of US festival main stage where the bass is felt in your sternum. It’s a smart remix because it doesn’t try to out-UK the UK. It translates the tune into a dialect a whole different crowd already speaks. Chase & Status made something timeless, and KNOCK2...
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June 16, 2026 at 6:45 AM
1 min read
Don Toliver - Body (AYDO8 Flip)
Read more . . . →A Don Toliver flip was always going to get my attention, because his voice is one of the most distinctive instruments in current rap and R&B. AYDO8 takes Body and reworks it into something built for a bass-heavy room, keeping Toliver’s hazy autotuned croon and dropping it over production with a lot more low-end muscle than the original. Toliver’s vocals already sound like they’re melting in the best way, so wrapping them in heavier sub-bass just amplifies that woozy late-night feeling. Flips like this live or die on whether they respect the source, and AYDO8 clearly loves the original enough to lift it rather than bury it. Trap Nation putting it up makes sense, because this sits right in the pocket between rap and bass music where the channel has always thrived. It’s the kind of edit that works equally well in a car with a real subwoofer or in...
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June 16, 2026 at 6:43 AM
1 min read
Ten Days On The Line
Read more . . . →In 2008 the workers at American Axle in Three Rivers, Michigan did the responsible thing. The company said the plant would die unless they gave back wages, so they gave back wages — a lot of them watched their pay get cut nearly in half, from $29 an hour to $14.50. They ate the concession to save their jobs. That’s the deal capital always offers in a downturn: bleed now or we close the doors. And for almost two decades they lived with it. Then this month nearly a thousand of them walked off the job at midnight, held the line for ten days, and came back with a contract that locks in $30 an hour by 2030. Same plant. Same company that swore back in 2008 it had nothing left to give. Turns out it had plenty — it just needed a parking lot full of people willing to...
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June 15, 2026 at 11:44 PM
1 min read
Hardwell & Dyro - Not Alone (Bass Modulators Remix)
Read more . . . →Second Hardwell cut in the batch, this time the Hardwell and Dyro track Not Alone getting flipped by Bass Modulators, and this is where it gets interesting. Bass Modulators come from the hardstyle world, so they drag this big room anthem somewhere harder and faster than the original ever dared go. The reverb-soaked kicks and the raw energy give Not Alone a completely different body, trading festival polish for something that punches you square in the sternum. I love a remix that doesn’t just tweak the original but genuinely relocates it to another genre, and that’s exactly what happens here. Hardstyle has been criminally underrepresented on the blog lately, so a track that smuggles it in through a Hardwell collab is a welcome backdoor. The euphoric melody survives the transition, which is the trick, because hardstyle at its best marries brutal kicks to genuine emotion. Bass Modulators nail that balance...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic hardstyle
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June 15, 2026 at 6:40 PM
1 min read
Born On Road & P Money - Bristol Style
Read more . . . →Born On Road is the label that always sounds like a smoky basement with a soundsystem too big for the room, and “Bristol Style” leans all the way into that reputation. P Money on the mic is the easy sell here. The man could read a takeaway menu over a halftime break and make it sound like a war cry, so handing him a title like “Bristol Style” is basically a layup. The riddim has that ragga-jungle bounce that owes everything to the West Country lineage it’s named after, all sub pressure and skanking snares. I love how unbothered it is about being polished. It feels live, like it was tracked in one take with the monitors clipping. There’s a swagger to UK bass music when it stops trying to crossover and just talks to its own crowd, and this is firmly that. Put it on at a function and...
- This entry was posted in:   drum and bass jungle
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June 15, 2026 at 5:13 PM
1 min read
Hardwell - Encoded (2ACES Remix)
Read more . . . →Hardwell is a big room institution, and Encoded is one of those tracks built to detonate a stadium, so a 2ACES remix was always going to aim for the cheap seats. This version keeps the original’s massive festival-sized DNA while updating the energy for where the main stage sound is right now. The drop is enormous in the way only big room really commits to, all rising tension and then a wall of synth that’s engineered to make twenty thousand people jump at the exact same second. Big room gets clowned for being formulaic, and honestly the criticism isn’t wrong, but when it’s done with this much conviction the formula still works on me every single time. 2ACES clearly studied the blueprint and then cranked everything up a notch. Revealed has been Hardwell’s playground for years, so this lives right at home on the label. Subtlety left the building a...
- This entry was posted in:   big room electronic
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June 15, 2026 at 2:36 PM
1 min read
HEDEGAARD, Waka Flocka Flame - Control
Read more . . . →HEDEGAARD and Waka Flocka Flame is a sentence I did not expect to type, and yet here we are. Control pairs the Danish producer’s clean radio-ready dance production with Waka’s unmistakable bark, and the collision is a lot more fun than it has any right to be. Waka has always had one of the most commanding voices in rap, and dropping it over a polished dance beat gives the whole thing this weird gleeful energy. The drop is built for festival main stages, big and bright and engineered for a sea of people losing it at the exact same second. Is it a little ridiculous? Absolutely. That’s the appeal. Spinnin clearly heard the meme potential and the actual banger potential at the same time and decided to chase both. I respect a collab this unlikely committing this hard to the bit. Sometimes the dumbest idea on paper is the one...
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June 15, 2026 at 2:15 PM
1 min read
Barely Alive & Ragga Twins - We Set It
Read more . . . →Barely Alive pulling the Ragga Twins onto a riddim tune is the kind of move that shouldn’t work on paper and absolutely demolishes in practice. The Ragga Twins have been around since the jungle and hardcore days, so hearing those vocals chopped over a 2026 dubstep skank is a small time-travel trick. The drop doesn’t try to reinvent anything. It locks into that wobble-and-skip groove Barely Alive have spent a decade perfecting, then lets the toasting carry all the swagger. I keep coming back to how mean the low end sits without ever sliding into wall-of-noise brostep. There’s actual space in it. The vocal hits breathe, the bass answers back, and the whole thing rides like a soundsystem cut that wandered onto a festival main stage by accident. If you’ve been complaining that riddim all blurs together lately, this is the rebuttal. Turn it up loud enough to annoy a...
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June 16, 2026 at 11:21 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
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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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