Pev parries acid, jungle, techno and deep house with another particular set of FX parameters in the latest of his Pulse series .
The Bristol-bassed don of no-nonsense but deadly functional dance trax sounds like he’s having top craic with this series of back-to-basics box bangers. He leans into a juicy late ‘80s UK take on the OG Chi sound with ‘Pulse XIII’, subtly tinted with gloaming night over Avon synth pads, whilst licking his beloved touchstone of mid ‘90s jungle with spiralling, woozy analog arms like Krust gone Radiophonic with the big highlight of ‘Pulse XIV’.
He tends to fundamental deep techno inspirations with the effortlessly rolling bass and spherical chords knit like prime G-Man or Convextion with added subs on the sexy swing of ‘Pulse XV’, and slackens the groove to a spot of UK bleep ’n bass take on deep house from he Sheffield playbook of Rob Gordon in ‘Pulse XVI’, nipped and tucked with signature finesse.
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Pev parries acid, jungle, techno and deep house with another particular set of FX parameters in the latest of his Pulse series .
The Bristol-bassed don of no-nonsense but deadly functional dance trax sounds like he’s having top craic with this series of back-to-basics box bangers. He leans into a juicy late ‘80s UK take on the OG Chi sound with ‘Pulse XIII’, subtly tinted with gloaming night over Avon synth pads, whilst licking his beloved touchstone of mid ‘90s jungle with spiralling, woozy analog arms like Krust gone Radiophonic with the big highlight of ‘Pulse XIV’.
He tends to fundamental deep techno inspirations with the effortlessly rolling bass and spherical chords knit like prime G-Man or Convextion with added subs on the sexy swing of ‘Pulse XV’, and slackens the groove to a spot of UK bleep ’n bass take on deep house from he Sheffield playbook of Rob Gordon in ‘Pulse XVI’, nipped and tucked with signature finesse.
Pev parries acid, jungle, techno and deep house with another particular set of FX parameters in the latest of his Pulse series .
The Bristol-bassed don of no-nonsense but deadly functional dance trax sounds like he’s having top craic with this series of back-to-basics box bangers. He leans into a juicy late ‘80s UK take on the OG Chi sound with ‘Pulse XIII’, subtly tinted with gloaming night over Avon synth pads, whilst licking his beloved touchstone of mid ‘90s jungle with spiralling, woozy analog arms like Krust gone Radiophonic with the big highlight of ‘Pulse XIV’.
He tends to fundamental deep techno inspirations with the effortlessly rolling bass and spherical chords knit like prime G-Man or Convextion with added subs on the sexy swing of ‘Pulse XV’, and slackens the groove to a spot of UK bleep ’n bass take on deep house from he Sheffield playbook of Rob Gordon in ‘Pulse XVI’, nipped and tucked with signature finesse.
Pev parries acid, jungle, techno and deep house with another particular set of FX parameters in the latest of his Pulse series .
The Bristol-bassed don of no-nonsense but deadly functional dance trax sounds like he’s having top craic with this series of back-to-basics box bangers. He leans into a juicy late ‘80s UK take on the OG Chi sound with ‘Pulse XIII’, subtly tinted with gloaming night over Avon synth pads, whilst licking his beloved touchstone of mid ‘90s jungle with spiralling, woozy analog arms like Krust gone Radiophonic with the big highlight of ‘Pulse XIV’.
He tends to fundamental deep techno inspirations with the effortlessly rolling bass and spherical chords knit like prime G-Man or Convextion with added subs on the sexy swing of ‘Pulse XV’, and slackens the groove to a spot of UK bleep ’n bass take on deep house from he Sheffield playbook of Rob Gordon in ‘Pulse XVI’, nipped and tucked with signature finesse.
Estimated Release Date: 17 January 2025
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Pev parries acid, jungle, techno and deep house with another particular set of FX parameters in the latest of his Pulse series .
The Bristol-bassed don of no-nonsense but deadly functional dance trax sounds like he’s having top craic with this series of back-to-basics box bangers. He leans into a juicy late ‘80s UK take on the OG Chi sound with ‘Pulse XIII’, subtly tinted with gloaming night over Avon synth pads, whilst licking his beloved touchstone of mid ‘90s jungle with spiralling, woozy analog arms like Krust gone Radiophonic with the big highlight of ‘Pulse XIV’.
He tends to fundamental deep techno inspirations with the effortlessly rolling bass and spherical chords knit like prime G-Man or Convextion with added subs on the sexy swing of ‘Pulse XV’, and slackens the groove to a spot of UK bleep ’n bass take on deep house from he Sheffield playbook of Rob Gordon in ‘Pulse XVI’, nipped and tucked with signature finesse.