Floating Points (5 Hour Set)
Boiler Room : New York
Committing to a five-hour Floating Points Boiler Room set in New York is an act of faith, a surrender to the notion that the journey is the destination. We're not here for quick hits; we're here for the deep, meandering river of sound only Sam Shepherd can navigate. The vibe is scholarly yet ecstatic, a room of heads nodding in slow motion as the lighting paints shadows across faces lost in thought. This is a marathon of texture, with a BPM average of 133.4 and a dominant key of 12A providing a hypnotic, harmonic throughline.
The energy data is telling—a profoundly low 0.63 average, with barely any high-end—confirming this as a deep, atmospheric excursion where the funk is in the details, not the drops. His mixing is patient and cerebral, letting tracks like Roman Flügel's epic 'Pattern 8' unfold over 88 minutes, exploring every nuance of its modular architecture. The harmonic progression is subtle, using keys like 3B and 6A for gentle modulations that feel organic rather than engineered. For crate diggers, this set is a holy grail.
The opener, Syclops' 'Pink Sarah Nyc Is Back,' is a quirky, jazz-inflected house gem that sets the off-kilter tone. João Bosco's 'A Nível De...' is a stunning Brazilian fusion curveball, while MickeyMar's 'Time To Jack' injects a shot of classic, vocal-led house warmth. The inclusion of John Summit's 'Legacy' feels almost playful, a modern peak slotted into this ancient tapestry. The journey is epic in the truest sense: beginning with Syclops' NYC homage, traveling through the vast expanse of 'Pattern 8,' and finally coming to rest on the serene, Balearic shores of Jonny Granville's 'Catch Your Fall.'.