Nooriyah
This is the sound of a peak-time tech-house set that has absorbed every global club trend of the last decade and is now vomiting them back out in the most entertaining way possible. Starting with the 'Tokyo Drift' theme is a power move that immediately announces: we are here for big riffs, bigger drops, and zero introspection. The vibe is a packed, humid box where the barriers between booth and dancefloor have completely dissolved, fueled by a shared appetite for relentless, mid-range heavy grooves. Technically, this set is a lesson in energy management. With an average BPM of 135 and a strong dual focus on the 12A and 5A keys, it creates a driving, harmonic bed for its eclectic selections.
The energy profile is overwhelmingly mid-dominant (0.73), meaning every synth hook, vocal sample, and acid line is pushed to the forefront for maximum impact. The low-end (0.16) is tight and functional, providing just enough thump to keep the body moving. Mixing is energetic and crowd-pleasing, using quick cuts and sudden drops to maintain a frenetic pace that never lets up. The crate digging here is gloriously unpretentious. Teriyaki Boyz's 'Tokyo Drift' is an iconic, curveball opener.
Lycan Beats' 'Palesteeni' brings a fresh Afro-house swing into the mix. Skin On Skin's 'Multiply' is a raw, percussive tech-house bomb, and DJ Snake's 'Disco Maghreb' remix is a slick, commercial-tinged moment that works perfectly in context. The journey is a riotous tour: it begins with the engine-revving sample of 'Tokyo Drift', builds to a sweaty, percussive peak with tracks like 'Soda', and closes on the utterly ridiculous, yet profoundly effective, club mash-up of 'Total Eclipse of the Heart'.