Where I’m From has a chip on its shoulder and I’m here for it. Domeno turns in a piece of festival electronic with an actual point of view — there’s a vocal running through it about roots and not forgetting where you started that could have been corny and instead comes off defiant. The production is big-room adjacent but smarter than the average main-stage banger, the drop at 1:25 leaning on a gritty, almost industrial lead instead of the usual polished supersaw. There’s a real physicality to the low end, a kick that thuds rather than clicks, and the whole thing has a slightly grimy edge that keeps it from feeling like every other big-room release. Revealed can be a factory for interchangeable festival fodder, so it’s nice to hear one of its artists sound like they’ve actually got something to say. The second drop switches up the rhythm just...
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July 07, 2026 at 1:19 PM
1 min read
Domeno - Where I'm From
Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   big room electronic
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July 07, 2026 at 12:24 PM
1 min read
Lexurus - Mesa
Read more . . . →Lexurus has been quietly making some of the prettiest liquid around, and Mesa is him operating at the top of his game. The whole track glides, a warm rolling break paired with chords that feel more like ambient music than anything designed for a dancefloor. What separates Lexurus from the crowd of Liquicity soundalikes is his sense of restraint; where others pile on layers, he leaves space, and that space is where Mesa breathes. There’s a bassline that comes in around the two-minute mark that is so smooth it almost slips past you, doing all the emotional work without ever calling attention to itself. I’ve had this on repeat for most of the afternoon and it hasn’t once worn out its welcome, which for a genre that can blur into wallpaper is no small feat. This is liquid for the headphones, the kind you put on to think or to...
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July 07, 2026 at 11:05 AM
1 min read
Calvin Harris headlines Tomorrowland and the man just prints money
Read more . . . →Ten days out, and Calvin Harris is one of three names holding down the Mainstage for opening weekend. Somewhere along the way the skinny Scottish kid who made “Acceptable in the 80s” became the highest-paid DJ alive and started writing pop songs for anyone with a pulse. His Tomorrowland set is basically a greatest-hits victory lap. Three that’ll show up: 1. Calvin Harris, Rihanna - This Is What You Came For Built on about four notes and unbeatable because of it. The restraint is the trick. The whole track is tension waiting for a chorus that barely arrives, and Rihanna floating over that plucky synth is peak festival-at-dusk. He knew exactly what he was doing. 2. Calvin Harris - Feel So Close Before the pop-collab era, this was Calvin singing his own hook through a wall of compression. The drop is a wide-open supersaw that sounds like the exact year...
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July 07, 2026 at 9:39 AM
1 min read
Digital X - The Night
Read more . . . →Some tracks are built for headphones and some are built for a field at 1am, and The Night is unmistakably the second kind. Digital X delivers a widescreen piece of festival electronic that’s made to be heard through a wall of speakers with a few thousand people around you. The vocal is anthemic and slightly anonymous in the way these things always are, but the build is where the craft lives — a full ninety seconds of tension-winding before the drop at 1:35 finally lets go into a huge, euphoric lead. It’s big, and it only really makes sense at volume; on laptop speakers you lose most of what makes it work. There’s a nice detail in the second half where the melody gets doubled an octave up and the whole thing feels like it lifts off the ground. Digital X aren’t after novelty here — they’re after the soundtrack...
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July 07, 2026 at 7:05 AM
1 min read
A 'Nonprofit' With $18 Billion Sent Untrained Nurses to the Nursery
Read more . . . →A “nonprofit” hospital chain sat on $18 billion in cash and decided the place to save money was the room with the newborns. Ascension’s nurses at Saint Agnes in Baltimore walked out this week because management has been floating med-surg nurses into the postpartum unit — nurses who don’t have the training to care for a baby in its first vulnerable hours — rather than hire the people the floor obviously needs. The union’s phrase for it was “trying to save pennies by shifting people around.” Pennies. On $18 billion. And the money is right there. Ascension cleared $608 million in profit over six months, more than double the year before, on top of a cash pile bigger than some countries’ reserves and a side investment company running $41 billion in assets. Executives have bragged, on the record, about slicing half a billion dollars out of labor costs like it...
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July 06, 2026 at 9:25 PM
1 min read
Leftwing : Kody - I Feel It
Read more . . . →This is the sound of a club at exactly the right hour, lights low, floor packed, nobody checking their phone. Leftwing : Kody have quietly become one of the most dependable duos in tech house, and I Feel It is them doing what they do best: a rolling, hypnotic groove with just enough vocal to give you something to hold onto. The bassline is deceptively simple, a two-note pulse that locks in around the thirty-second mark and refuses to let go for the next five minutes. Toolroom releases can blur together into one long functional groove, so I notice when one has an actual identity, and the little filtered vocal loop here is the hook that gives it one. There’s a breakdown at 2:40 where the drums drop out and it’s just that vocal and a bassline, and it’s engineered to make a room go quiet before it goes off....
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July 06, 2026 at 7:11 PM
1 min read
Conni, Lynxie, THEBOYBENNIE - WOULD U
Read more . . . →Three names on one track usually means either a supergroup or a committee, and WOULD U lands firmly on the fun side of that gamble. This is an NCS release, which means it’s built to soundtrack a thousand gaming montages, but Conni, Lynxie and THEBOYBENNIE inject enough personality that it rises above the usual copyright-free wallpaper. The vocal bounces between a bratty topline and a chopped hook, and the drop at 1:05 goes for a bass-house wobble that’s more playful than punishing. There’s a swing to the groove that a lot of NCS output misses — most of it is engineered to be inoffensive, and this one actually has a bit of attitude, a little sneer in the delivery. The bassline in the second drop mutates into something almost funky, which caught me off guard on the NCS channel of all places. I’m not going to oversell it; this won’t...
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July 06, 2026 at 3:39 PM
1 min read
KRITIKAL - WATCIS!
Read more . . . →The first thing you hear is a bassline that sounds like it’s being physically wrung out, and from there WATCIS! basically never lets your ears settle. This is Monstercat in full aggressive-dnb mode, all snapping breaks and a low end designed to test whatever you’re playing it on. KRITIKAL’s sound design here is genuinely nasty in the good way, every hit placed with the precision of someone who spent too long in the studio and enjoyed every minute. The drop at 0:52 does a stuttering, glitched-out thing that shouldn’t be danceable and absolutely is. What keeps it from being pure noise is the swing underneath, that little bit of groove that heavy dnb usually forgets to bring. I’ve had the second drop stuck in my head all afternoon, which is not something I can usually say about tracks this abrasive. Aggressive electronic music lives or dies on whether it grooves,...
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July 06, 2026 at 3:31 PM
1 min read
ARTO - Lost in Cancún
Read more . . . →Lost in Cancún sounds exactly like its title, which I mean as a genuine compliment. ARTO delivers a slice of melodic trance for Armada that’s all sun-bleached euphoria and forward motion, the kind of track made for the exact moment the sun comes up over a festival and everyone silently agrees to stay for one more. The lead melody is huge and grinning, a supersaw riff that builds across a full minute before the drop at 1:40 sends it skyward, and trance lives and dies on whether that release actually delivers — this one does. There’s a plucked arpeggio running underneath that keeps the whole thing propulsive even during the softer stretches, and the breakdown swaps euphoria for something almost tender before winding the tension back up. It’s not doing anything the genre hasn’t done for twenty years, and it doesn’t need to, because when the formula works it’s one...
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July 06, 2026 at 2:00 PM
3 min read
Every Festival Lineup Is the Same Eight Names
Every festival headliner is the same eight names because the top of the poster is a spreadsheet. The undercard is where the fun actually is.Read more . . . →- This entry was posted in:   bsky-posted electronic Featured Articles
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July 07, 2026 at 1:19 PM
1 min read
Editor's picks
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Ritual Ottawa, Dec 2
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