Buckle in for Steel City Dance Discs Vol. 26 with KETTAMA! The G-Town heavyweight ticks all the boxes with this 5-track barrage of head-thumping House and Techno.
Maruwa logs back on to infiltrate the S.C.D.D. network, disrupting systems with a 5-track cluster of interface-melting dance music.
The Saint Petersburg programmer re-codes Techno – encrypting it with hypnotic acid lines, dreamy Trance atmospherics and her very own vocal processing on ‘Dvizhenie’.
No firewall can stop this complete anatomical takeover.
Pick your poison! Skream bites down for Steel City Dance Discs Volume 23. The Croydon (London, U.K.) native strikes hard with a 3-track injection of heaving dance floor venom.
A motley of pumping rhythms courses through the veins of this EP as he reaches into his diverse repertoire of soundscapes.
The record opens up with Doolally – a euphoric House shaker intoxicated with nostalgia. Now in its grip, Space Ghetto swells up with tight breaks and aching bass; the tune is peppered with head nods to early hardcore tropes and a voice recording of Big Miz. Symptoms persist with Drago The Destroyer, which finishes us off with a rapid onslaught of chest thumping kicks and off-kilter synth rushes.
We salute our 20th release by returning to where it all began: with one of SCDD’s co-conspirators and the inaugural release for the label, Mall Grab.
Steel City Dance Discs Volume 20 dons four tracks packed with MG’s synonymous energy and attitude – serving as a beacon of light amongst the swamp that be.
The X CLUB. beasts have busted out of Brisbane, Australia with Steel City Dance Discs Volume 22.
Buckle in as the renegades, known individually as DJ Speed/Jesse Patrick and NORA DRUM, take us on a manic hoon through electro, rave and jungle-informed techno.
Although this is only their first vinyl offence, their criminal record is a hefty one. The delinquents are charged with lawless breaks, aggravated synth chaos, verbal sample assault and series of twisted bass infringements.
Handle with caution: Steel City Dance Discs Volume 21 sees London’s Yazzus carve up a razor-sharp 4-track boost of jacking club music.
With a history of mind-bending dance offerings, Yazzus continues the saga – fusing Techno, Footwork and Juke-leaning sounds into a blistering ball of high-energy rave.
Samuel Walker aka Deejay Astral first emerged onto the scene in 2011 under the Palace alias with a string of raw Garage / House releases on DJ Haus’ Unknown To The Unknown & Hot Haus imprints. In late 2015 he made the switch over to his Astral moniker to take his production in a deeper direction, since his switch he has released on Shall Not Fade, W&O Street Tracks and now Steel City Dance Discs.
Astral’s infectious brand of playful club music is perfect for the dance floor.
The name is a homage to his Australian hometown Newcastle and will serve as a platform to share music from his favourite artists. The two tracker features striped back, punchy jams.