Styles Drum and Bass, Future Beats, Wonky/Beats, Drumstep
Release 4/08/2021
Quality MP3/192 kbps
Rar 82 Mb «All Mixes (Link)»
Release 4/08/2021
Quality MP3/192 kbps
Rar 82 Mb «All Mixes (Link)»
Style Drum & Bass
Date 4/08/2021
HQ MP3 128 kbps
Label Drum&BassArena
Zippy 75 Mb
The podcast returns following our milestone 25th birthday last week, featuring a stack of exclusives from the likes of Digital & Charla Green, Bailey, Sully, Philth, Lovely and more, with a heavyweight guest mix from gyrofield who's just released a huge new EP on Overview Music.
Date 4/08/2021
HQ MP3 128 kbps
Label Drum&BassArena
Zippy 75 Mb
The podcast returns following our milestone 25th birthday last week, featuring a stack of exclusives from the likes of Digital & Charla Green, Bailey, Sully, Philth, Lovely and more, with a heavyweight guest mix from gyrofield who's just released a huge new EP on Overview Music.
Style Drum and Bass
Release 23/11/2018
Quality 320 kbps MP3
Imprint Sub-liminal Recordings
Nr# SLR044
Review: Sub-liminal Recordings is one of those small, low-key labels that every now and then actually releases some pretty outstanding music. This time it's the turn of Sam Harris, who's music is a lot more exciting than his name might suggest, his two-tracker here rolling out in delicious fashion. 'Coffee Machine' is the first, a spooky, spacious introduction giving way to a subtle, pulsing back end that sits perfectly underneath a skippy percussive line. 'Boom Ting' is in a similar vein but manages to amp up the drum-pressure even more with a fantastic percussive line, as its sneaky little bassline creeps in underneath this to transform it into a proper little roller. Sick single.
Release 23/11/2018
Quality 320 kbps MP3
Imprint Sub-liminal Recordings
Nr# SLR044
Review: Sub-liminal Recordings is one of those small, low-key labels that every now and then actually releases some pretty outstanding music. This time it's the turn of Sam Harris, who's music is a lot more exciting than his name might suggest, his two-tracker here rolling out in delicious fashion. 'Coffee Machine' is the first, a spooky, spacious introduction giving way to a subtle, pulsing back end that sits perfectly underneath a skippy percussive line. 'Boom Ting' is in a similar vein but manages to amp up the drum-pressure even more with a fantastic percussive line, as its sneaky little bassline creeps in underneath this to transform it into a proper little roller. Sick single.