Second Nico Szabo and Aske Izan track in this batch, this time with SAM SHI on vocals, and Aside shows a softer more song-shaped side of the duo. Where Paranoid was all tension, Aside opens up into something warmer and more emotional, with SAM SHI’s vocal floating over that signature Anjunadeep haze. The deep house framework is still here, the patient groove and the careful textures, but the vocal gives it a center of gravity that pulls everything toward the heart instead of the dancefloor. This is the kind of track that works as well on a quiet drive as it does in a club at the right hour. Anjunadeep has always understood that deep house can be a feeling and not just a function, and Aside leans into that fully. Two posts from these two in one week and I’m not mad about it, because the range between the...
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June 12, 2026 at 9:32 AM
1 min read
Nico Szabo & Aske Izan - Aside (feat. SAM SHI)
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   deep house
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June 12, 2026 at 9:21 AM
1 min read
Uptempo: 200 BPM was the floor, not the ceiling
Read more . . . →Uptempo is what happens when hardcore decides that slowing down is for cowards. It’s the fastest, most aggressive corner of the Defqon.1 site, kicks distorted past the point of melody, and the crowd that shows up for it knew exactly what it was signing up for. A couple weeks out, here’s where the speed lives.
1. Riot Shift - RUNNIN
Riot Shift has turned into one of the sharper names in this lane, and “RUNNIN,” out in October, is relentless in the way the title promises.
2. N-Vitral presents BOMBSQUAD & Dimitri K - Energy Drink
The BOMBSQUAD alias is N-Vitral at his most unhinged. “Energy Drink” is accurate branding and not much of an exaggeration.
3....
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June 12, 2026 at 7:23 AM
1 min read
18 years of Viva la Vida, still wearing the costume
Read more . . . →18 years ago today, Coldplay released Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends. It still sucks.
This was supposed to be the brave one — the big reinvention. They put a Delacroix painting of an actual revolution on the cover, zipped themselves into surplus-store military jackets, and hired Brian Eno to scuff up the corners. Then they handed in the most focus-grouped record of the decade. You cannot cosplay as the barricades and write songs engineered to play under a phone commercial at the same time. The title track is a man who has never lost anything in his life pretending he used to rule the world, and a planet of people who’d never stormed anything decided that counted as catharsis. The jacket is a costume. The band wearing it is exactly who you always knew they were.
The part that actually gets me is the year they...
- This entry was posted in:   anniversaries coldplay music political
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June 12, 2026 at 6:45 AM
1 min read
Sevek, Lady Bee, Vikina - Corazon
Read more . . . →“Corazon” brings together Sevek, Lady Bee and Vikina for a hot-blooded slice of Latin-flavored dance music that practically demands movement. The Spanish vocal gives it instant character, all fire and attitude, riding over a rhythm that borrows from reggaeton and house in equal measure. This is summer-anthem material, the kind of track engineered for an open-air party as the temperature climbs. There’s a real swagger to the production, the percussion popping with energy while the drop keeps things firmly aimed at the dancefloor. I appreciate that it commits fully to the vibe instead of watering down the Latin influence to play it safe. Lady Bee has a knack for these crossover bangers and the collaboration here clearly brought out everyone’s best. It’s unpretentious, infectious fun that doesn’t overthink itself. Stick it on at a barbecue and watch the energy shift instantly. Sometimes you just want something that makes people dance,...
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June 11, 2026 at 11:44 PM
1 min read
LAXX - Step 666
Read more . . . →LAXX has been quietly one of the most reliable names in dubstep for years and “Step 666” is him reminding everyone why. The track opens almost politely before the first drop arrives like a door getting kicked off its hinges. There’s a nasty, metallic quality to the lead that sits somewhere between a robot clearing its throat and a chainsaw with opinions. What I love is the restraint in the build, the way he lets the tension stretch just long enough that you start doubting whether the payoff is coming, and then it absolutely flattens you. The 666 in the title isn’t only edgelord branding either, the whole thing has a genuinely menacing low end that feels designed for a system big enough to rearrange your organs. I played it twice in a row at a volume my neighbours will remember. Dubstep gets written off as a dead genre every...
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June 11, 2026 at 5:13 PM
1 min read
Kiholm & LEA KEY - Take Me Back
Read more . . . →Kiholm teaming up with LEA KEY on “Take Me Back” lands right in that sweet, nostalgic pocket of melodic dance music that pulls at something without being manipulative about it. The vocal is wistful and warm, a plea for return that the production wraps in shimmering synths and a steady, propulsive beat. There’s a real sense of yearning baked into the whole arrangement, the kind that makes a packed room go quiet for a second before the drop sends everyone moving again. Kiholm has a deft touch with these emotional builds, never rushing the payoff. The melody is the star here, simple enough to remember and pretty enough to mean it. I’m a sucker for dance music that isn’t afraid to feel something, and this leans into the sentiment without tipping into schmaltz. It’s the sort of track that soundtracks a long night and an even longer drive home. Armada...
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June 11, 2026 at 2:47 PM
4 min read
Chase & Status: How DnB Crashed the UK Charts
How Chase & Status snuck heavy drum and bass onto UK daytime radio with No More Idols, never softened the bass, and ended up rave elder statesmen.Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   chase-and-status drum-and-bass pendulum plan-b stormzy
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June 11, 2026 at 2:36 PM
1 min read
Jude & Frank - The Sound Of House
Read more . . . →Jude & Frank dropping “The Sound Of House” on Toolroom is about as on-the-nose as a title can get, and honestly the track earns the swagger. This is peak-time tech house built for maximum dancefloor damage, all rolling bassline and a vocal hook that does exactly what it says on the tin. Toolroom has been the home of this sound for years, and the duo slot right into that lineage with a track that feels engineered in a lab for sweaty 2am rooms. The groove is hypnotic and relentless, the kind of loop you could happily ride for eight minutes straight. There’s a cheeky confidence to naming your track this and then actually backing it up, which I respect. The drums hit with that satisfying tech-house snap, and the bass rolls underneath like a freight train. It’s functional dancefloor music in the best possible sense, no pretension, just groove. Mark...
- This entry was posted in:   house tech house
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June 11, 2026 at 11:14 AM
1 min read
Jey Vazz - wanna do
Read more . . . →Jey Vazz dropped “wanna do” through NCS and it’s the kind of effortlessly groovy electronic track that sneaks onto your playlist and refuses to leave. There’s a bounce to this one that feels almost playful, built around a vocal hook that’s simple enough to stick instantly. The production sits in that sweet spot between house and pop-leaning electronic, never committing too hard to either, which keeps it feeling fresh. I love how light it is on its feet, no overwrought drama, just a clean groove and a melody that knows it’s good. The bassline does this subtle little walk that gives the whole thing momentum without ever showing off. It’s the kind of track you’d put on to get a room moving without scaring anyone off. Not every song needs to be a statement, sometimes you just want something that feels good, and this absolutely does. Jey Vazz is one...
- This entry was posted in:   electronic house
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June 11, 2026 at 7:39 AM
1 min read
The Big China Deal Is That You Keep Paying
Read more . . . →Trump announced a “trade deal” with China today. Here’s the deal: the 20% fentanyl tariff stays, the 10% reciprocal tariff stays, the effective rate on Chinese goods sits near 30% — the highest on any country on earth — and the bigger tariffs he threatened get paused for sixty days. That’s the whole agreement. He held a press conference to tell you nothing changed and that this is a tremendous win.
A tariff is a tax, and you’re the one who pays it. The Tax Foundation put a number on it: this trade war is the largest tax hike as a share of the economy since 1993, about $1,500 a year out of the average household. So when the man stands at a podium and announces he kept that tax exactly where it was, understand what he’s actually celebrating. He’s celebrating that the fifteen hundred dollars is still coming out...
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June 12, 2026 at 9:32 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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