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ARTIST
TITLE
Globus Trax
FORMAT
12"

LABEL
CATALOG #
TRESOR 375EP TRESOR 375EP
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
6/6/2025

Tresor resident DJs LNS and DJ Sotofett have for some years been developing a style at the club's Globus floor, and their new EP is a die cut of exactly the classic techno, electro, and house music they play. Here are no productions drenched in reverb, no hi-fi obsessions or generic algorithmic patterns -- this is Globus Trax, the duo's third release on Tresor Records, four tracks consisting of real TR-909 workouts, rude and driving basslines, live runs through the mixing desk, and a Blake Baxter cover version with LNS on vocals. LNS & DJ Sotofett programmed an EP to perfectly fit their warehouse style of DJing, bringing out color and variation in a spectrum more similar to a club compilation than a dogmatically reduced concept. With a single repeated vocal sample, Globus Trax opens bombastically with "ClickClickClick," a dub -infused UK garage house track anyone in the world can easily describe in the course of a second. Following this comes "Gearbox" which is a hefty slab of big room electro featuring a centerpiece arpeggio and the warmest harmonic pads on the EP's four tracks, which not-so-subtly makes reference to the pioneering band that shares a name with Globus and Tresor's home, the Kraftwerk. The house vibe returns on "Destination 909," which is nothing but a manifesto for the TR-909, where the beloved drum machine's jacking beats meet galactic strings and synthetic bass, only to be ripped apart in a slamming break that sees the machine take center stage as it cuts in-and-out of the mix, again a clear nod to the duo's sets in the club. LNS steps up on vocal duties and DJ Sotofett keeps the 909 running for their final cut, taking a deeper dive into the realms of classic techno and paying tribute to "The Prince of Techno" Blake Baxter by covering his "Reach Out" originally released on Tresor Records in 1995. The 12" was cut by DJ Sotofett himself at Manmade Mastering, where he resurrects the lost art of late-'90s loud cuts with sonic presence and punch, optimal for the club-focused 12" format, and is the first to come in the new Tresor Sleeve, boasting an embossed logo on either side.