Top 100 Chart placements for onedotsixtwo
Updated 2 years ago
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Were excited to welcome Ultraverse into the onedotsixtwo story with an EP that radiates subtle craft, groove and atmosphere. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris feels like the work of an artist who understands the power of space and restraint — and how to let music breathe while still pulling a dancefloor forward. Vera & Avant-Garde opens the release with a groovy, stripped-back pulse, all clean percussion, rolling bass movement and beautifully measured detail. Its one of those deceptively simple grooves that quietly locks a room together, letting DJs settle into a perfect late-night flow without ever pushing too hard. Ultraverse leans into nuance and clarity…..and it works. On Mea Astris, he heads into spacey, FX-laden territory, drifting through cosmic pads, echo trails and hypnotic rhythmic patterns. The track feels like a journey inward and outward at once, balancing emotional atmosphere with a deep, low-end drive built for the later hours. To elevate the EP, we pulled in artists who deeply understand the progressive blueprint. For Vera & Avant-Garde, Gorkiz and Fernando Olaya join forces for a true collaborative remix, a seamless blend of their strengths rather than two separate interpretations. Their combined rework feels alive, bouncing ideas between them and building on the originals stripped groove with added colour, movement and dancefloor thrust. Fernandos melodic finesse and Gorkizs percussive instinct meet in the middle, creating a single, unified version that expands the tracks energy while keeping its classy spirit intact. On the flip side, Menkee makes his onedotsixtwo debut with a powerful reimagining of Mea Astris. He takes the originals floating, celestial feel and anchors it with tougher drums, rising tension and that unmistakable peak-time momentum hes known for. It lifts the track into a bigger, bolder, rougher and tougher space, a proper late-night moment. Ultraverse arrives with a background shaped by early inspiration from Nick Warren, Sasha, Hernan Cattaneo, Lee Burridge and Depeche Mode, and years of dedication as A&R for BC2 Records. His music has travelled across respected labels like Balkan Connection, Pro B Tech, Mystique Music, Incepto Deep, BCSA, Bonzai Progressive and more — always marked by a sense of humility, passion and attention to detail. His debut on onedotsixtwo feels like a natural fit: an artist grounded in groove and atmosphere, supported by collaborators who lift the music into new spaces without losing its heart. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris is a journey from stripped-back groove to cosmic exploration, finishing in full dancefloor ignition — and were proud to share it.
Were excited to welcome Ultraverse into the onedotsixtwo story with an EP that radiates subtle craft, groove and atmosphere. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris feels like the work of an artist who understands the power of space and restraint — and how to let music breathe while still pulling a dancefloor forward. Vera & Avant-Garde opens the release with a groovy, stripped-back pulse, all clean percussion, rolling bass movement and beautifully measured detail. Its one of those deceptively simple grooves that quietly locks a room together, letting DJs settle into a perfect late-night flow without ever pushing too hard. Ultraverse leans into nuance and clarity…..and it works. On Mea Astris, he heads into spacey, FX-laden territory, drifting through cosmic pads, echo trails and hypnotic rhythmic patterns. The track feels like a journey inward and outward at once, balancing emotional atmosphere with a deep, low-end drive built for the later hours. To elevate the EP, we pulled in artists who deeply understand the progressive blueprint. For Vera & Avant-Garde, Gorkiz and Fernando Olaya join forces for a true collaborative remix, a seamless blend of their strengths rather than two separate interpretations. Their combined rework feels alive, bouncing ideas between them and building on the originals stripped groove with added colour, movement and dancefloor thrust. Fernandos melodic finesse and Gorkizs percussive instinct meet in the middle, creating a single, unified version that expands the tracks energy while keeping its classy spirit intact. On the flip side, Menkee makes his onedotsixtwo debut with a powerful reimagining of Mea Astris. He takes the originals floating, celestial feel and anchors it with tougher drums, rising tension and that unmistakable peak-time momentum hes known for. It lifts the track into a bigger, bolder, rougher and tougher space, a proper late-night moment. Ultraverse arrives with a background shaped by early inspiration from Nick Warren, Sasha, Hernan Cattaneo, Lee Burridge and Depeche Mode, and years of dedication as A&R for BC2 Records. His music has travelled across respected labels like Balkan Connection, Pro B Tech, Mystique Music, Incepto Deep, BCSA, Bonzai Progressive and more — always marked by a sense of humility, passion and attention to detail. His debut on onedotsixtwo feels like a natural fit: an artist grounded in groove and atmosphere, supported by collaborators who lift the music into new spaces without losing its heart. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris is a journey from stripped-back groove to cosmic exploration, finishing in full dancefloor ignition — and were proud to share it.
Were excited to welcome Ultraverse into the onedotsixtwo story with an EP that radiates subtle craft, groove and atmosphere. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris feels like the work of an artist who understands the power of space and restraint — and how to let music breathe while still pulling a dancefloor forward. Vera & Avant-Garde opens the release with a groovy, stripped-back pulse, all clean percussion, rolling bass movement and beautifully measured detail. Its one of those deceptively simple grooves that quietly locks a room together, letting DJs settle into a perfect late-night flow without ever pushing too hard. Ultraverse leans into nuance and clarity…..and it works. On Mea Astris, he heads into spacey, FX-laden territory, drifting through cosmic pads, echo trails and hypnotic rhythmic patterns. The track feels like a journey inward and outward at once, balancing emotional atmosphere with a deep, low-end drive built for the later hours. To elevate the EP, we pulled in artists who deeply understand the progressive blueprint. For Vera & Avant-Garde, Gorkiz and Fernando Olaya join forces for a true collaborative remix, a seamless blend of their strengths rather than two separate interpretations. Their combined rework feels alive, bouncing ideas between them and building on the originals stripped groove with added colour, movement and dancefloor thrust. Fernandos melodic finesse and Gorkizs percussive instinct meet in the middle, creating a single, unified version that expands the tracks energy while keeping its classy spirit intact. On the flip side, Menkee makes his onedotsixtwo debut with a powerful reimagining of Mea Astris. He takes the originals floating, celestial feel and anchors it with tougher drums, rising tension and that unmistakable peak-time momentum hes known for. It lifts the track into a bigger, bolder, rougher and tougher space, a proper late-night moment. Ultraverse arrives with a background shaped by early inspiration from Nick Warren, Sasha, Hernan Cattaneo, Lee Burridge and Depeche Mode, and years of dedication as A&R for BC2 Records. His music has travelled across respected labels like Balkan Connection, Pro B Tech, Mystique Music, Incepto Deep, BCSA, Bonzai Progressive and more — always marked by a sense of humility, passion and attention to detail. His debut on onedotsixtwo feels like a natural fit: an artist grounded in groove and atmosphere, supported by collaborators who lift the music into new spaces without losing its heart. Vera & Avant-Garde / Mea Astris is a journey from stripped-back groove to cosmic exploration, finishing in full dancefloor ignition — and were proud to share it.