Nervous Horizon Lab Takeover: Ehua, object blue, TSVI & Wallwork
A Nervous Horizon takeover promises one thing: our preconceptions about tempo and genre are about to be politely, yet firmly, dismantled. This Lab session with Ehua, object blue, TSVI & Wallwork is a clinic in percussive, UK-focused electronics that treats the 130 BPM zone as a playground, not a prison. The vibe is experimental and physical, all dim lights and kinetic energy focused on intricate rhythm patterns. Technically, this is a genre-defying ride through broken beat, techno, and bass, with an average BPM of 131.9 but a range stretching from a crawl at 91 to a sprint at 171.
The key of 12A dominates, offering a stable plane for complex, off-kilter percussion to dance upon. The exceptionally high average low energy of 0.70 tells the story: this is all about the gut-punch of the kick and the texture of the bassline, with mids and highs used as precise, sparing accents. Transitions are often abrupt and cinematic, reflecting the label's curated, album-like approach. For crate diggers, the treasures are plentiful: TSVI's 'Reflex' with Randomer is a thunderous, industrial-strength opener, while Anunaku's 'Spirale' is a mesmerizing, polyrhythmic tool.
The inclusion of Anz's 'Loos In Twos (NRG)' is a masterstroke of UK funky revival, and hearing Skream's 'You Know, Right?' repurposed in this context is a delight. The 35-minute epic 'The Relic' by Machinedrum & Rochelle Jordan is the set's daring centerpiece, a journey in itself. The closing selection of Laksa's 'Ardhall' provides a dissonant, atmospheric come-down. The journey from the aggressive 'Reflex' through the rhythmic therapy of Morning Motion's 'Frequency Therapy' to the sparse, haunting 'Ardhall' is less a DJ set and more a composed statement from one of electronic music's most vital imprints.