Top 100 Chart Placements
Updated 2 years ago
On Brahmaputra, Asa Tate lays out a fully realised vision of his current sound: gritty, tightly-wound basslines, 80s-leaning house sensibilities, crisp, precise percussion, and organic textures threaded through with an early 90s energy-touches of Balearic beat, dubwise pressure, and flashes of proto-trance all surfacing across the record. The EP navigates two distinct yet complementary sides of his output. On one hand, the more floor-facing cuts-Gizmo! and Maximum-lean into a Balearic-tinted strain of progressive house. On the other, tracks like Brahmaputra and Silk drift into slower, more meditative territories-never losing their pull, but allowing space for a different kind of dancefloor moment.
On Brahmaputra, Asa Tate lays out a fully realised vision of his current sound: gritty, tightly-wound basslines, 80s-leaning house sensibilities, crisp, precise percussion, and organic textures threaded through with an early 90s energy-touches of Balearic beat, dubwise pressure, and flashes of proto-trance all surfacing across the record. The EP navigates two distinct yet complementary sides of his output. On one hand, the more floor-facing cuts-Gizmo! and Maximum-lean into a Balearic-tinted strain of progressive house. On the other, tracks like Brahmaputra and Silk drift into slower, more meditative territories-never losing their pull, but allowing space for a different kind of dancefloor moment.