Perc's contribution to Stroboscopic Artefact's Monad series is dark and droney, awash in analog delay and endless reverb. The EP travels a great distance in only four tracks, incorporating elements of dubstep and ambient into its finely textured techno.

This latest release on Nice Cat Records pairs the Chilean styles of Los Updates with the Venezuelan hailing Argenis Brito. While one may go in expecting a South American affair that hints at the specific flavor of Latin-flavored minimal house and techno that emerged last decade, there are plenty of other twists and turns on the EP that should leave fans delighted, and a little confused.

On this release series Deep Data brings us some lost vinyl tracks to help fill our hard drives. This installment features remixes of classic Breitbarth tracks.

This duo combines the synth hooks and leads of italo disco, with the production and structuring of modern techno music. The result is a catchy stripped down kind of electro house, and it works.

Exclusive interview with Techno veteran and Klap Klap label founder Samuel L Session.

This is as pure as techno gets. The legendary Samuel L Session joins the FWD roster with an exclusive set that is reminiscent of the Jeff Mills era. Straight forward in every way possible, this mix chugs, glitters and rampages its way directly into your cerebral cortex with an hour of flawless mixing execution. Get ready for the peak time Sessions!

Traversable Wormhole anonymously tore up the scene in 2009 with a slew of vinyl only, futuristic techno releases. The project was recently revealed as NYC techno veteran Adam X's return to techno after time spent in the industrial scene - there is a classic quality to his work similar to Luke Slater's Planetary Assault Systems.

It’s been a busy year for Jonas Kopp, producing a fine EP on Curle and steadily representing his home country of Argentina, yet he thankfully found the time to present another killer EP with absolutely no filler.

Jupiter/Mercury EP, off of Jamie Anderson's Artform label, takes the party to space in a duo of high orbiting floor killers that preserve a nasty warehouse feel while wetting a toe in trance.

Beaner, otherwise known as Pablo Roman-Alcala, is one who never loses sight of the details, a true conceptualist that follows the tiniest inkling, the most fleeting of desires. How else can you explain his recent mini-LP, Denis Johnson?