Top 100 Chart Placements
Updated 2 years ago
Some records don't knock-they phase in, like a signal hijacking your nervous system mid-thought. Underneath The Frequency / Saltwater Gospel is exactly that kind of intrusion: a slow-burn psychic takeover engineered by Glenn Morrison & Night Waves, two long-haul navigators of the global dancefloor who've spent the better part of 25 years bending crowds to their will. This isn't nostalgia dressed up as relevance-it's the sound of veterans who never left the circuit, still wiring the underground with that same restless voltage. What they've delivered here is a hypnotic house EP that feels less like a collection of tracks and more like a controlled substance-administered in beats per minute, absorbed somewhere between the spine and the subconscious. 'Underneath The Frequency' uncoils with surgical patience, a low-slung groove that creeps through the mix like a coded transmission, equal parts tension and release. It's the kind of track that DJs deploy when the room is teetering-when the crowd needs to be pulled deeper, not lifted out. Then comes 'Saltwater Gospel,' a strange, almost spiritual descent-humid, immersive, and faintly unhinged. There's a ritualistic quality to it, as though the dancefloor has become a congregation and the bassline is delivering sermons in a language nobody speaks but everyone understands. Unsurprisingly, this double-shot of hypnotic intent has already earned heavy rotation from global selectors like Hernan Cattaneo, Sasha & John Digweed, and Nick Warren, rippling through international club charts and late-night sets with quiet authority. Marking the 185th release on Fall From Grace Records, this EP doesn't just add to the catalogue-it reinforces the mythology. The label has carved out a reputation as one of the most uncompromising forces in the underground, a place where depth matters and trend-chasing goes to die. Underneath The Frequency / Saltwater Gospel fits that ethos like a glove dipped in midnight oil: bold, immersive, and unwilling to dilute its vision. In a landscape cluttered with disposable noise, Fall From Grace continues to deal in permanence-and this release is another sharp reminder that the real pulse of club culture still lives far below the surface.