Dub / ninja

SignalDiscoveries › Fri, 3 Jul 2026

Fri, 3 Jul 2026

Today’s dig is all about chromium-plated electro and steely techno marching in lockstep, with Dopplereffekt’s "Superior Race" and The Other People Place’s "Eye Contact" both clocking 9.1 as the standouts. Slam, 6SISS and Herton keep the four-on-the-floor end mercilessly tight, while The Hacker and Jensen Interceptor add more silicon to the circuitry.

20 added to rotation

Deep, melodic currents at 120 BPM that blur the line between club tension and after-hours hypnosis.

I’d deploy this bruising 140-BPM Mord payload whenever the floor needs pure, unrelenting tension.

A lean, 140-BPM nocturnal pivot that trades peak-time aggression for hypnotic leftfield texture.

I’d call this 133 BPM cut a warehouse weapon—pure pressure, zero daylight, and the kind of sound design that earns the Soma stamp.

Sleek Locus minimalism that distils deep house into a taut, metallic 130-BPM club weapon.

A restrained yet fervent 125bpm march through shadowed frequencies, tailor-made for the bleeding-edge hours when the room demands feeling over force.

Late-night Detroit electro at 128 that turns maximum voltage into pure, hypnotic elegance.

Serrated 130 BPM electro that trades polish for pure magnetic menace, built for basement systems.

A bruising 136 BPM speed garage cut that flexes hard but plays it safer than the label’s usual leftfield curveballs.

Relentless 133 BPM pressure in 5A; raw electro energy filtered through a bass-heavy, club-credible lens.

Ice-cold electro precision at 133 BPM; ruthless circuitry built for peak-time domination.

Relentless 133 BPM electro pressure with a locked-groove intensity that demands total floor submission.

I'd reach for this functional, high-velocity late-night roller when the floor needs locking in, though it struggles to leave a lasting mark beyond the moment.

Percussive heat meets deep warmth at 125 BPM—a locked-in after-hours weapon that lets the drums do the talking.

A sleek, high-voltage electro weapon that weaponises its 125 BPM framework into something both cerebral and ruthlessly effective.

Serrated electro at a breathless 136 BPM; I’d wager every frequency here is precision-cut for peak-time impact.

I drop this at 143 BPM when the floor needs locking into steely, after-hours hypnosis.

I deploy this relentless 146 BPM armour plating when the floor demands industrial-strength hypnosis without mercy.

A capable after-hours cruiser that leans on organic warmth but never quite escapes the progressive house middle lane.

Leftfield breaks at 122 that channel peak-time voltage into a moody, tasteful after-hours drift.