Yushh
Keep Hush Live: More Cowbell Takeover
We've all endured the existential crisis of watching a DJ confidently mix out of a track you just Shazam'd, rendering your precious ID instantly obsolete. Yushh's Keep Hush Live set for More Cowbell is a delightful exercise in this mild torture, a tech-house and melodic house voyage that's both accessible and cunningly clever. The vibe is that of a packed, intimate club where the smoke machine is working overtime and everyone's nodding with a knowing, slightly smug grin. Yushh operates in a smooth, groovy lane with an average BPM of 125, firmly rooted in the harmonic comfort of 12A. The energy is predominantly low-end focused (0.73 avg low), creating a deep, rolling foundation perfect for long, hypnotic blends.
This is tech-house with a brain, where the mids and highs are used as precise accents—think atmospheric pads and crisp percussion rather than obvious drops. The mixing is likely fluid and harmonic, with the tight BPM range (115-133) allowing for seamless transitions that build energy incrementally. Key visits to 7A and 5A provide just enough tonal variation to keep the journey interesting. The standouts are a masterclass in selective curation. Opening with Dom Dolla's 'Take It' is a cheeky, crowd-pleasing move, instantly locking in the groove.
Manu Gonzalez's 'Smoking Weed (Italoboyz Purple Haze Remix)' offers a deeper, more psychedelic twist, while Anunaku's 'Atlas4088' brings a touch of tribal, percussive drive. The crown jewel is Minor Science's 'Blue Deal', a near-15-minute epic of evolving synth lines and intricate rhythm programming that demonstrates Yushh's trust in the material. TRG's 'Broken Heart (Martyn's DCM Remix)' adds a dose of melancholic, bass-weight nostalgia. The arc is clear: it kicks off with the infectious bounce of 'Take It', journeys through the deep and percussive landscapes of 'Atlas4088' and 'Blue Deal', reaches a euphoric peak with the emotional pull of the TRG remix, and concludes with the driving, synth-heavy closure of BLR & Rave & Crave's 'Taj'. A set that rewards both casual shuffling and nerdy analysis in equal measure.