DA Premiere: Digital Lab and Mits – Here We Go (Original Mix)
Digital LAB started the year with a radio podcast debut, but the Miami native has been relatively quiet since then. Today, he breaks his new song, a collaboration with Mits, that has the signatures of a summer festival smash. Starting with a crisp kick drum and pulsating synths that crescendoes to a drop tailored for massive outdoors subwoofers. With the inserted "Here we go!" vocal before the break, the song immediately dives into frenetic energy that the average college student cannot resist.
DA Premiere: user601586061 – Superfriends.
When the blogosphere stumbled upon the 'Moves Like Ms. Jackson' track last week, rampant speculation of a Disclosure and Outkast Coachella appearance swept the frenzied internet. Though nobody still can correctly identify the artist, another track with similar album art has surfaced, called 'Superfriends.' The familiar 'Z' is overlayed on top of the black and white cover art, accompanying this time an original track. The unidentified artist again packs a wobbly UK garage bass and the same falsetto croon, but also with deep rap lyrics sprinkled throughout the song. With no hint of how many tracks are to follow, we can only hope this will become a weekly routine.
DA Exclusive: Walter Meego – Through a Keyhole (Le Castle Vania remix)
Le Castle Vania has been a staple on the blogosphere since early 2008 for his electro-infused remixes that are most well known for their beautiful melodies over teeth-grinding synths. With the impending Prophication EP coming out next month on Mau5trap records, he refreshes one of his past edits, the hauntingly beautiful "Through a Keyhole." With a somber chorus floating over syncopated power chords, the song evokes a deliciously creepy mood that matches that of the lyrics.
Mark Knight’s ‘Nothing Matters’ music video warns of an authoritarian future… with a twist
Mark Knight teams up with Skunk Anansie frontwoman Skin to give us the brooding, booming "Nothing Matters," which leans more dark techno than rhythmic house. The video suggests a Orwellian future in the United Kingdom, but this is fascism unlike we've ever seen it before. We won't spoil the surprise, but let us know what you think!