Groove Armada
Mixmag Lab Liverpool
When Groove Armada commandeer the Mixmag Lab in Liverpool, it's less a DJ set and more a victory lap for house music itself. We're here because we still believe in the power of a stupidly catchy vocal hook, even as we pretend to be above it. The vibe is that of a converted industrial space now pulsing with red and blue LEDs, a crowd of seasoned heads already nodding in approval before the first beat drops. Technically, this is a masterclass in big-room house fundamentals, locked into a steadfast 127.7 BPM groove and harmonically centered on the warm, welcoming tonality of 12A.
The energy profile is telling—a deep, resonant low-end at 0.60 dominates, with mids at 0.32 providing the rhythmic scaffolding and just a sliver of high-end sparkle at 0.08, creating a sound that's physically immersive rather than frenetic. The mixing is assertive and functional, prioritizing momentum over delicate blends, building a relentless pressure that defines the room's kinetic state. Our crate-digging instincts are rewarded with Butch's 'Joy', a minimal-tech-house loop that becomes hypnotic in this context, and the opening salvo of Nic Fanciulli's 'Over', a track whose driving bassline sets the uncompromising tone. Dropping their own 'I See You Baby' is a cheeky, crowd-pleasing move that acknowledges their pop legacy while the Fatboy Slim edit keeps it ravey.
Then there's the sheer audacity of weaving in David Guetta & Showtek's 'Bad', a track we'd normally side-eye, but here its stomping synth riff feels like a deliberate, effective sledgehammer. The journey is a straight line from that defining opener, 'Over', through the peak-time singalong of 'I See You Baby', before winding down with the heads-down, acid-tinged drive of Macromism's 'The Walk'.