A mathematically complex broken beat handmade out of beefy kicks, snares, and metallic rim hits drops in and immediately picks...
Winston Mann
A producer at the height of his specific powers, Developer cultivates the near-complete hypnosis of long journeys or a fevered...
This genre-spanning and frequently surprising EP succeeds in making disparate influences from EBM to hyperpop cohere in what could be imagined as a creatively curated, subterranean cyberpunk ruin. VTSS made a name for herself on the Polish underground techno scene with her relentless, cheeky sets; and now enjoys a well-deserved...
Julian Muller delivers six emotive, heart-pounding tracks on his latest project, an EP which references classic rave and drum &...
Insane and well-crafted (and very fast) music from a queer techno party, held in countries where it is not always...
This lush and overpoweringly elegiac multi-instrumental reimagining of a Barbieri track by eight different artists reminds us that electronic music can be reinvigorated by classical instrumentation, and vice versa. The concept is straightforward: eight artists remake Barbieri’s unforgettable opening track “Fantas” from her 2019 release Ecstatic Computation. The outcomes are...
Pool is an unfamiliar planet. You crash land into a territory that is at once organic and otherworldly. By listening,...
The kitchen-sink style approach of including almost every existing genre on a release is on display at it’s most fun...
Let’s face it: most people just aren’t that into strictly drum-and-hat driven techno. By suffusing an otherwise innovative and rave-adjacent album with influences culled from deep within the mainstream, smart electronic artists like Moscow’s Pixelord can orangepill whole new generations of fans over to the dark side. You know the...
Music for a clash of clans after a devastating global extermination event, Emerald’s VA Essential Memories EP featuring the label’s...
Aura Flirt is a nostalgic thrill-ride of lightning round trance, techno and bridled hardcore that showcases impressive might without ever...
Somewhere between a glossy mid-2000s pop album and a hefty, DIY ravestarter project, this collaboration manages to cultivate a rare tongue-in-cheek energy by winking cheekily at an oft-maligned past. “Straight to hell and come back” the album opener declares, one imagines a singed Winona Ryder in that last scene of...