Top 100 Chart placements for Bass Culture Records
Updated 1 hour ago
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First up in DJulzs The School of Night EP on his Bass Culture label is Nu Bass, a fresh and upbeat house sound with kinetic percussion and well-swung drums. Steamy vocal coos and deft synth stabs build a compelling future vibe before Spooky Electrik comes in with more punchy but deep house sound. Dancing hi-hats pepper the groove along with curious little synth motifs, bringing a cosmic feel while the all-important bassline powers things forward. DJulzs knack for cooking up killer grooves is evident again on Money, Honey, Monday? which is jacked up and percussive but also hugely seductive, with the smeared vocals and warming pads keeping things classy and soulful. Last of all, Triperie is more menacing and stripped back - a paranoid lead synth roams about the mix as the crisp drums rise and fall in a fashion that will get floors marching late into the night. Julien Veniel, aka DJulz, has been a mainstay of the European scene for decades. He has established his Bass Culture label as one of house musics finest, always with a focus on deep sounds and punchy drum work. As well as his effective and stylish club cuts, he dropped his Silent Drums album of ambient back in 2020 and continues to DJ all over the world. He is an artist who knows how to get real feelings into his tracks and shows that again here.
First up in DJulzs The School of Night EP on his Bass Culture label is Nu Bass, a fresh and upbeat house sound with kinetic percussion and well-swung drums. Steamy vocal coos and deft synth stabs build a compelling future vibe before Spooky Electrik comes in with more punchy but deep house sound. Dancing hi-hats pepper the groove along with curious little synth motifs, bringing a cosmic feel while the all-important bassline powers things forward. DJulzs knack for cooking up killer grooves is evident again on Money, Honey, Monday? which is jacked up and percussive but also hugely seductive, with the smeared vocals and warming pads keeping things classy and soulful. Last of all, Triperie is more menacing and stripped back - a paranoid lead synth roams about the mix as the crisp drums rise and fall in a fashion that will get floors marching late into the night. Julien Veniel, aka DJulz, has been a mainstay of the European scene for decades. He has established his Bass Culture label as one of house musics finest, always with a focus on deep sounds and punchy drum work. As well as his effective and stylish club cuts, he dropped his Silent Drums album of ambient back in 2020 and continues to DJ all over the world. He is an artist who knows how to get real feelings into his tracks and shows that again here.