Dan Shake bumpin’ house & disco set in the Lab LDN
Another night in The Lab LDN, and Dan Shake is here to remind us that the best house music has always had a disco heartbeat. We're all guilty of frantically Shazam-ing that one perfect piano loop, and this set is a treasure trove for that particular affliction. The room is warm, the lights are low, and the bass is just thick enough to feel in your chest without overwhelming the groove. Averaging a steady 126.7 BPM, Shake operates primarily in the 3B and 7A Camelot zones, weaving a harmonic tapestry that feels both nostalgic and fresh.
The energy profile—with low frequencies at 0.51 and mids at 0.40—tells the story: this is a deep, body-moving journey, not a peak-time frenzy. His mixing is seamless, letting tracks breathe and build naturally, with transitions that respect the original recordings' integrity. The BPM stays in a tight 125-128 range, ensuring a consistent groove, while key modulations from 3B to 5A create subtle emotional lifts without jarring changes. This balance shapes the room into a unified, dancing mass where rhythm reigns supreme.
For crate diggers, the opener 'Gems For Jem - Lifting Me Higher (Peak Energy Mix)' sets the tone with its soaring vocals, while 'Dan Hartman - Instant Replay' is a masterclass in classic disco-house fusion. 'Francine McGee - Delirium' offers a darker, percussive interlude, and 'Allen S - Ocean Flowers' brings aquatic deep house textures. Don't sleep on 'Love De-Luxe - Here Comes That Sound Again'—that anthem we've all chased—or 'Grant Nelson - Rhode House' for a dash of UK garage flair. The journey from the uplifting start of 'Lifting Me Higher', through the extended peak of 'Uncle Louie - Sky High', and landing gently with the mystic rhythms of 'Peter Croce - Do What You Wanna Do' is a lesson in disco-house narrative building.