EML Recordings Music Feed podcast artwork

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EML Recordings Music Feed

EML Recordings is a UK based Electronic Dance music label. Established in October 2009, EMLrepresents an army of Dance Music Producers, DJ’s, Radio Show Hosts, Event Organisers and Music Industry Professionals.EML Recordings is a name synonymous with ground breaking Electronic Dance music. We have growing support and we are committed to bringing you the best in new electronic music from around the world.In a world where many music labels are falling by the wayside, we stick to our motto "AS THE GIANTS FALL...WE RISE"Specializing in all styles and sub genres of House / Trance / Techno.We have something for everyone, so feel free to have a look around, and enjoy the music. http://www.emlrecordings.org/We have launched 2 new labels in 2012 Sub Generation Records, which focuses solely on Drum N Bass, Dubstep, and Breaks.4LayZee Records, which focuses on Deep House, Down Tempo, Chill, and Electronica.******You will find tracks from all 3 labels posted on this profile*****

Publisher-supplied feed metadata · PodParley refreshed May 13, 2023 · Source feed

  1. 85

    Flukus - Technicalities (Original Mix)

    Technicalities is built to hit both sides of the market: the producer / DJ audience who will understand the lyrical joke and the festival-facing crowd who want big synth-led impact. The vocal gives the release its identity, using the technicalities of music creation as a playful concept and pushing it into an exaggerated, tongue-in-cheek space. Around that, the big synth hits and percussion drive the track into mainstage territory, with enough electro house and bass house weight to keep it useful for higher-energy club sets. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and versatile. The Original Mix gives selectors the full club version, the Radio Edit provides a shorter direct cut for playlist and broadcast use, and the Instrumental version opens the track up for DJs who want the energy without vocal overlap. This is a record designed to feel big, fun, and useful — festival-sized enough for mainstage sets, direct enough for commercial electronic playlists, and distinctive enough to stand apart because of the producer / DJ-focused lyrical concept.

  2. 84

    Fallon's Cry - Aftermath (Extended Mix)

    Aftermath is built around emotional pull, melodic seriousness, and a polished trance arrangement that gives the track both listener appeal and DJ value. The vocal presence gives the release its identity, adding atmosphere and emotional connection, while the melody, synth movement, and bass work provide the lift and drive needed for a strong trance record. The track has a sense of journey: it draws the listener in, plays with tension and release, and leaves a cleaner, more uplifted feeling by the end. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and commercially useful. The Extended Mix gives selectors room to build, blend, and use the full emotional arc. The Original Mix provides a focused club version, while the Radio Edit gives the release a shorter, more accessible cut for radio, social content, playlist pitching, and casual listeners. This is a record designed to stay with people — emotional enough for vocal trance audiences, direct enough for Beatport buyers, and strong enough to work as a serious peak-time melodic moment in trance-focused DJ sets.

  3. 83

    Flukus- Time Of Our Lives (Original Mix)

    Time Of Our Lives is built to hit both sides of the market: the festival mainstage audience and the high-impact electronic dance crowd. The vocal gives the release its emotional identity, adding warmth and memorability, while the synth hits, percussion structure, and bass elements push it firmly into peak-time territory. There is a slight trance and hardstyle edge in the scale and intensity of the production, but the core identity remains mainstage-led with big-room crossover appeal. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and versatile. The Original Mix gives selectors the full club-facing structure, the Radio Edit provides a more direct commercial cut, and the Instrumental Mix opens the track up for DJs who want the energy without vocal overlap. This is a record designed to create lift, impact, and recognition — euphoric enough for festival sets, heavy enough for mainstage peak-time moments, and accessible enough to hold attention outside of specialist scenes.

  4. 82

    JARR Head & Juan Alminana Obando - Eternity (Extended Mix)

    Eternity is built around movement, progression, and classic trance architecture rather than vocal-led immediacy. The absence of vocals gives the track a purer instrumental identity, allowing the arps, synth layers, melodic phrasing, and arrangement flow to carry the full emotional weight. This makes it particularly useful for DJs who want to create lift and atmDrivingosphere without introducing a vocal moment too early in a set. At 138 BPM, the track sits in a strong uplifting trance lane. It has enough pace and drive for club use, but the focus is clearly on melodic detail and progression rather than brute-force impact. The Extended Mix gives selectors space to blend, build, and position the record as part of a longer trance journey. This is a record designed for trance listeners who value structure, melody, and development — detailed enough for focused listening, functional enough for DJ support, and classic enough to sit naturally within uplifting trance programming.

  5. 81

    Matteo Desko & Jan Johnston - Raindrop (Extended Mix)

    Raindrop is built for the deeper end of the melodic electronic market: late-night melodic techno, progressive house-adjacent DJ sets, and listeners who connect with atmospheric vocal-led music. The vocal gives the release its emotional centre, adding warmth and recognisability against the darker production bed. Matteo Desko’s groove work keeps the track restrained and controlled, with rhythmic movement and melodic tension doing the heavy lifting instead of obvious peak-time impact. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and focused. The Extended Mix gives selectors room to blend into deeper melodic techno or progressive sets, while the Radio Edit provides a cleaner listener-facing cut for platforms, radio, and shorter-form promotion. This is a record designed to pull people inward — subtle enough for warm-up and journey-led sets, emotional enough to connect with vocal electronic audiences, and polished enough to sit beside credible melodic techno and progressive house material.

  6. 80

    SJM - Like a Sunlight (Extended Mix)

    Like A Sunlight is built to connect with both the dedicated vocal trance listener and the DJ looking for a bright, melodic, peak-time release. The vocal gives the track its emotional centre, creating warmth, memorability, and human connection, while the 140 BPM structure keeps it driving and dancefloor-ready. The production is clean and direct, with a strong sense of flow from the opening movement through the break, build, and euphoric drop. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and practical. The Extended Mix gives selectors enough space to mix, build tension, and use the full journey of the record, while the Radio Edit gives the track a tighter format for playlists, radio, short-form content, and casual listeners. This is a record designed to feel bright, emotional, and immediate — uplifting enough for trance sets, accessible enough for wider electronic listeners, and polished enough to represent EML Recordings as a label with a clear vocal trance lane.

  7. 79

    Lerry Müller - Light Beyond the Fall (Original Mix)

    Light Beyond The Fall is built for the emotional side of the trance market: uplifting enough for club and festival moments, but melodic and vocal enough to connect with listeners beyond specialist DJ sets. The vocal gives the release its identity, carrying the sense of struggle, lift, and release suggested by the title. The rhythm section keeps the record moving with a clean 136 BPM trance drive, while the melodic structure gives it the emotional payoff needed for uplifting and vocal trance audiences. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and direct. The Original Mix gives selectors the full club structure, while the Radio Edit provides a tighter version for streaming, radio, short-form content, and playlist pitching. This is a record designed to feel emotional without becoming soft — haunting enough to stand out, uplifting enough to move a trance floor, and accessible enough to work across radio, playlist, and Beatport-facing promotion.

  8. 78

    Paul Ross [AU] - -Hold me High

    Hold Me High & Hold Me Close is built to work across two connected but distinct listener experiences: the emotional uplift trance audience and the deeper underground electronic audience. “Hold Me High” gives the release its most immediate trance identity. The vocal phrases are direct and memorable, the progression feels controlled, and the atmosphere gradually reels the listener in. It has the emotional lift needed for trance-focused listeners, but the deeper tone keeps it from feeling too obvious or overly commercial. “Hold Me Close” provides contrast. It sits in a more laid-back, broken-beat space with a rawer industrial edge, giving the package more underground credibility and a less predictable second side. The vocal repetition helps maintain identity, while the rhythm and texture move it away from standard uplifting trance territory. This is a release designed to create emotion, depth, and movement — melodic enough for trance sets, atmospheric enough for late-night listening, and raw enough to stand apart from cleaner formulaic vocal trance records.

  9. 77

    Tomi Jaakko - Momentum (Extended Mix)

    Momentum is built for trance audiences who want energy, clarity, and melodic release without unnecessary clutter. The track leans into classic uplifting trance language: bright melodic movement, crisp production, clean arrangement flow, and that familiar sense of build-and-release that trance DJs can immediately understand. The absence of vocals gives the record a more flexible DJ function, allowing it to sit inside longer trance sets without lyric clashes or tonal interruption. The arrangement is direct and useful. The Extended Mix gives DJs room to blend, build tension, and place the track properly in peak-time sections, while the Radio Edit gives EML a tighter version for YouTube, short-form promotion, streaming platforms, and general listener discovery. There is a clear tech edge in the pressure and tempo, but the emotional identity remains uplifting. This is not a soft background trance record. It is a clean, high-energy instrumental designed to move a room, lift a set, and give trance fans something familiar enough to trust but strong enough to remember.

  10. 76

    Andy Jaymes (UK) - The Durus

    The Durus is built for selectors who want pressure, weight, and forward motion. The track’s identity comes from its pounding 140 BPM rhythm, dark mechanical atmosphere, and uncompromising late-night energy. The industrial textures give it a raw underground character, while the trance-influenced synth details provide lift and tension without softening the overall impact. The arrangement is focused and DJ-friendly. It does not rely on vocals or commercial hooks; instead, it builds momentum through rhythm, atmosphere, and sustained pressure. That makes it useful for heavy techno sets, peak-time warehouse moments, and harder electronic playlists where energy and intensity matter more than radio accessibility. This is a record designed to move dark rooms — hypnotic enough for underground techno, direct enough for peak-time club impact, and energetic enough to cross into trance-facing big-room techno environments.

  11. 75

    Dan Dodson Ft. Uliana - Im On Fire

    I'm On Fire is built to sit between emotional listener appeal and practical DJ usability. The vocal gives the release its main emotional identity, adding lift, clarity, and memorability, while the production keeps the record moving with progressive house drive, atmospheric details, and a smooth club-facing structure. There is a subtle trance influence in the melodic lift and vocal scale, but the core identity remains progressive house-led with a polished EDM Addicts character. The arrangement is useful for both DJ and promotional contexts. The Original Mix gives playlist curators, radio shows, and vocal-led DJs a strong emotional hook, while the Instrumental Mix opens the release up for DJs who want the melodic energy without vocal overlap. This is a record designed to feel smooth, uplifting, and replayable — accessible enough for broader dance audiences, refined enough for progressive house selectors, and energetic enough to work in melodic club sets.

  12. 74

    Flukus - It's Just You

    It's Just You is built to hit both sides of the market: the emotional festival-dance audience and the high-energy mainstage crowd. The vocal gives the release its memorability, adding a direct emotional identity while the synth melodies and drum patterns push it firmly into festival territory. There is a clear trance edge in the melodic lift and breakdown feel, but the core identity remains mainstage-led with big-room impact and modern electro-house pressure. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and versatile. The Original Mix gives selectors the full extended shape for bigger builds and club play, the Radio Edit provides a shorter commercial cut, and the Instrumental Mix opens the track up for DJs who want the energy without vocal overlap. This is a record designed to create lift, recognition, and movement — catchy enough for mainstream EDM listeners, powerful enough for big-room sets, and melodic enough to appeal to trance-leaning festival audiences.

  13. 73

    Juan Almiñana Obando - Forever Free

    Forever Free is built for the emotional and melodic side of the trance market: clean, warm, uplifting, and easy to connect with. The melody gives the release its identity, flowing naturally without becoming over-complicated, while the 138 BPM tempo keeps it firmly within DJ-friendly uplifting trance territory. The track has a smooth sense of lift, building patiently into a euphoric payoff that feels bright, open, and positive. The arrangement is practical for trance DJs. Its instrumental structure means it can sit cleanly in a set, avoid vocal clashes, and provide a warm emotional bridge between higher-energy records. This is a record designed to create glow, movement, and uplift — melodic enough for classic trance listeners, clean enough for radio and playlist use, and warm enough to work as a mid-set emotional lift.

  14. 72

    Funky Resistance - Hove Actually Extended Mix [EDM Addicts]

    Funky Resistance delivers a true underground House anthem with Hove, Actually a vibrant, feel-good club weapon built for packed dancefloors, seaside sunsets, and hands-in-the-air moments. Loaded with infectious groove, playful character and undeniable personality, this is the kind of record that instantly locks into the memory of anyone who's ever lived, partied, or lost themselves somewhere between Brighton & Hove's legendary nightlife culture. This is Hove....actually !

  15. 71

    AMC - Love Of Yesterday (Original Mix)

    Love Of Yesterday is built to connect quickly. The melody and hook feel instantly familiar, almost like the listener already understands the signal before the track fully opens up. The vocal gives the release its emotional centre, pulling the listener into a brighter, more uplifting space. Underneath that, the track carries a bouncy trance rhythm, tech-edged pressure, and true AMC rave euphoria. It is catchy, direct, and easy to absorb without losing dancefloor weight. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and accessible. The Original Mix gives selectors a longer version for proper set placement, while the Radio Edit provides a more immediate cut for streaming, YouTube, radio, socials, and listener-first promotion. This is a record designed to lift the room, stick in the head, and create a positive emotional reaction — euphoric enough for trance audiences, bouncy enough for rave crossover moments, and catchy enough to work beyond specialist DJ circles.

  16. 70

    On The Edge

    On The Edge is built to hit both sides of the market: the emotional uplift trance audience and the high-energy rave crowd. The instrumental arrangement gives the release its identity, using warmth, depth and restrained progression rather than vocal hooks. The rhythm rolls steadily, with a minimal edge that makes it useful for warm-up sets, deeper club moments, and melodic progressive transitions. The arrangement is DJ-friendly because it avoids overloading the mix. It should be easy to blend into progressive house, melodic techno, organic house, and deeper late-night sets where subtle control is more important than impact-driven drops. This is a record designed to create flow, depth, and restraint — progressive enough for melodic house playlists, deep enough for underground sets, and controlled enough to sit comfortably before heavier material.

  17. 69

    System Fail

    System Fail is built for the moment in a set where emotion turns into pressure and the drop needs to land hard. The vocal inserts give the release its identity, adding urgency and recognition without turning the track into a full vocal-led single. The countdown element creates a direct sense of anticipation, while the euphoric lead work and harder rhythm section push it into a powerful peak-time trance space. The arrangement is DJ-focused and impact-driven. At 143 BPM, the track has enough pace and pressure for harder uplifting trance sets, tech-trance moments, livestream peaks, and festival-style programming. It carries emotional lift, but the real strength is the energy release when the drop hits. This is a record designed to create adrenaline, movement, and crowd reaction — euphoric enough for uplifting trance audiences, tough enough for tech-trance DJs, and direct enough to work as a high-impact Beatport-focused single.

  18. 68

    Never Stop (Original)

    Never Stop is built to hit both sides of the market: the emotional vocal trance listener and the peak-time festival trance DJ. The vocal gives the release its commercial identity, adding immediacy, memorability, and emotional pull, while the 140 BPM energy and uplifting progression push it firmly into trance territory. There is a clear big-room scale in the impact and presentation, but the core identity remains trance-led with strong melodic lift and a hands-in-the-air payoff. The arrangement is DJ-friendly and versatile. The three-version package gives selectors more options depending on the set: a full club-focused version for impact, a shorter listener-facing option for radio and streaming, and additional flexibility for promo use across different trance environments. This is a record designed to feel immediate, uplifting, and accessible — commercial enough to work beyond specialist trance audiences, energetic enough for peak-time sets, and melodic enough to hold emotional value for listeners who want trance with a clear vocal hook.

  19. 67

    Medicine (Extended Mix)

    A high-energy vocal trance release driven by memorable vocals, rave-infused energy, uplifting progression, and genuine crossover appeal. Medicine is built around accessibility without sacrificing dancefloor credibility. The vocal performance immediately provides identity and memorability, while AMC's production delivers the energy, movement, and emotional lift expected from peak-time vocal trance. The record balances multiple strengths: - Strong vocal hook - Clear melodic identity - Natural energy progression - Commercial accessibility - Festival suitability - Radio compatibility - DJ-friendly structure At 135 BPM, Medicine sits comfortably within modern vocal trance territory while remaining accessible enough for wider dance audiences. The arrangement creates repeated emotional lift moments that work equally well for dedicated trance listeners and casual dance music fans. The release package provides three mixes, increasing usability across different environments and audiences.

  20. 66

    Think I'm In Love (Original Mix)

    Think I'm In Love is designed for high-energy environments where tension, release, and immediate crowd impact matter most. The release is powered by oversized synth leads, pounding kicks, aggressive electro textures, and tightly engineered build-and-drop dynamics that keep the energy level consistently elevated throughout. The trance crossover influence appears through the melodic synth structures and emotional movement inside the arrangement, helping the release avoid sounding overly mechanical or generic. At 138 BPM, the track naturally leans toward harder-edged festival and crossover trance/mainstage environments while still remaining accessible to big-room and electro house audiences. The arrangement is highly DJ-friendly: - Strong intro/outro usability - Peak-time drop structure - Long transition compatibility - Consistent energy momentum - Immediate crowd payoff Classic Flukus: Big synth identity. Massive crowd energy. Pure peak-time force.

  21. 65

    You Are Pmportant (original extended mix)

    You Are Important is a deeply melodic uplifting trance release focused on movement, progression, and emotional energy rather than aggressive festival impact. The record leans heavily into the classic trance principle of momentum through evolving melodic layers. Rising arps, atmospheric synth textures, and carefully controlled tension create a sense of continuous forward motion throughout the arrangement.

  22. 64

    Coming Back For More [EDM Addicts]

    Tom O’s debut release through EDM Addicts immediately positions him inside the melodic underground space rather than commercial electronic music. Coming Back For More is driven by atmosphere and momentum rather than explosive drops. The bassline acts as the engine of the track, continuously pulling the arrangement forward while the melodic layers create hypnotic tension and emotional depth. There is a strong sense of movement throughout the arrangement. The progression is patient and DJ-conscious, allowing the track to evolve naturally over time rather than forcing quick payoff moments. The dark edge gives the release credibility within deeper melodic techno circles, while the progressive structure keeps it accessible to DJs who sit between melodic house, melodic techno, and deeper progressive sounds.

  23. 63

    For Anyone Who's Lost Someone - Extended Club Mix

    For Anyone Who’s Lost Someone balances emotional weight with club functionality. The release is built around a driving progressive groove with darker melodic movement underneath. The arrangement avoids becoming overly euphoric and instead leans into tension, atmosphere, and emotional pull. There is enough grit and momentum to work in deeper club environments while still carrying melodic accessibility. The trance influence is subtle rather than dominant. It appears in the emotional undertones and evolving melodic structure rather than supersaw festival energy. Meanwhile, the melodic techno influence appears through the hypnotic atmosphere and driving low-end movement. The Extended Club Mix is the strongest DJ-focused version in the package. It gives selectors room for layering, long blends, and tension-building transitions while maintaining emotional impact. This release works because it feels emotionally real rather than manufactured. The darker emotional foundation gives the track identity while the groove keeps it usable in actual DJ environments.

  24. 62

    Make You Feel [Sub Generation Records]

    Primary Genre: Mainline Drum & Bass Secondary Context (NOT genre): Light Drum & Bass crossover appeal / upbeat male vocal energy / accessible high-energy dancefloor appeal The genre analysis strongly positions this release within Mainline Drum & Bass (93%) with additional Light Drum & Bass crossover support (91%). The supporting Heavy Drum & Bass influence gives the release enough edge to work in energetic dancefloor environments without becoming overly aggressive or underground. Make You Feel is best positioned as an upbeat, vocal-led Mainline Drum & Bass release designed to work across both listener-facing streaming platforms and DJ-focused environments. The slick male vocal provides immediate accessibility and memorability, while the energetic drum programming and rolling low-end maintain enough weight for club and radio support. This is not neurofunk, not minimal Drum & Bass, and not liquid-focused emotional introspection. The strongest lane is modern accessible Mainline Drum & Bass with commercial crossover energy and uplifting vocal movement. This track should always be positioned as: A vocal-led Mainline Drum & Bass release with uplifting energy, modern dancefloor momentum, and strong crossover accessibility.

  25. 61

    Feel the Light

    Feel The Light is built around emotional accessibility and melodic payoff. The vocal instantly creates familiarity and emotional lift, while the melodic structure carries the listener smoothly from section to section without friction. The record feels effortless to listen to, which is one of its strongest commercial assets. The production leans heavily into uplifting melodic movement rather than aggressive tension. The result is a release that feels bright, energetic, emotional, and highly repeatable. There is clear crossover appeal here: - Progressive House listeners will connect with the groove and melodic flow - Trance audiences will connect with the emotional uplift and euphoric atmosphere - Mainstage audiences will connect with the scale and accessibility The arrangement is DJ-friendly while remaining highly listener accessible. Key strengths: - Strong vocal memorability - Festival-ready melodic structure - Immediate emotional connection - Smooth transitions and flow - Strong replay value - Accessible crossover positioning - Clean peak-time energy without aggression The melody is the defining feature of the release.

  26. 60

    Pull me under + When I Wasn't Looking

    Pull Me Under is built around emotional tension and hypnotic movement. The male vocal gives the record a heavy emotional pull while the melodic structure slowly develops underneath. The arrangement feels immersive rather than explosive, allowing the emotional atmosphere to build gradually across the track. The melodic techno influence is dominant throughout, especially within the darker synth movement and progressive low-end groove. The track succeeds because it pulls listeners deeper into the atmosphere rather than chasing obvious commercial hooks. I’m Not Looking complements the package by introducing a female vocal dynamic while maintaining the melodic underground identity. The progression structure is cleaner and slightly more uplifting, but the emotional depth remains consistent with the release direction. Both tracks balance underground credibility with emotional accessibility.

  27. 59

    Nothing To Lose (Original Mix)

    Nothing To Lose is a full-scale mainstage assault designed for peak-time club environments, festival stages, and maximum audience reaction. The production is driven by enormous synth leads, pounding kicks, snarling electro-influenced textures, and tightly controlled build-and-release dynamics. The arrangement wastes very little time establishing intent — this track is designed to create immediate physical impact. The atmospheric female vocals give the track additional emotional identity and provide contrast against the aggressive instrumental backbone. Rather than softening the energy, the vocals elevate the scale of the release and reinforce its festival-ready appeal. The synth work carries a sharp and aggressive edge while still maintaining enough melodic structure to remain memorable and accessible. The drops are engineered around energy payoff rather than complexity, making the record highly effective in large-scale environments where crowd reaction matters more than subtlety. There is clear crossover appeal between big-room festival audiences, electro house listeners, and harder-edged trance/mainstage fans. The 130 BPM tempo also gives DJs flexibility to bridge between electro house, mainstage EDM, and more energetic crossover festival material. The release package is particularly strong from a DJ usability perspective: - Original Mix for full festival impact - Radio Edit for listener-facing and streaming platforms - Instrumental Mix for cleaner layering and DJ flexibility This is a record designed to create eruption moments — hands in the air, CO2 cannons firing, lights exploding, and peak-time energy reaching maximum intensity. Classic Flukus: Big synth identity. Huge festival pressure. Built to detonate at the right moment.

  28. 58

    Another Life

    Another Life captures the emotional side of uplifting trance without sacrificing momentum or dancefloor impact. The production balances drive and emotion exceptionally well. The 140 BPM tempo gives the track enough energy for peak-time trance environments, while the vocal and melodic structure introduce a reflective and deeply human atmosphere that connects beyond purely functional club music. The vocal performance is central to the identity of the release. It carries emotional weight without becoming overly commercial, allowing the track to remain credible within trance-focused DJ sets while still offering memorability and listener connection. Musically, the release leans heavily into euphoric progression, uplifting synth movement, and layered melodic development. The breakdowns create genuine emotional tension before releasing into energetic trance drops that feel rewarding and expansive rather than aggressive. This is a record designed to work both emotionally and physically — equally effective for late-night trance sets, festival uplift moments, livestreams, and listener-focused streaming playlists.

  29. 57

    Open Sky (Extended Mix)

    Open Sky delivers exactly what uplifting trance audiences expect from a modern peak-time vocal release: emotional atmosphere, disciplined arrangement structure, and a huge euphoric payoff. The opening sections establish momentum quickly with a heavy pounding kick and clean trance percussion before introducing melodic progression layers that steadily build emotional intensity. The vocal sits in a strong atmospheric lane, providing emotional elevation rather than overpowering the record with pop structure. The breakdown is where the release fully opens up. Pads, melodic movement, and vocal layering create a genuine feeling of lift before the tension rebuilds toward a massive euphoric drop designed for large systems and emotional dancefloor moments. What separates this release from generic vocal trance is the precision of the arrangement. The progression feels deliberate, the energy transitions are controlled, and the reward after the build lands with authority. This is not background trance. It is designed for hands-in-the-air moments, festival tension release, and emotional peak-time impact. The production also maintains strong DJ usability despite the emotional focus. The energy remains consistent enough for long blends while still delivering standout melodic identity.

  30. 56

    Land of Ice (JP Lantieri Extended Remix)

    Land Of Ice [JP Lantieri Remix] is built around tension, movement, and immersion rather than explosive payoff. The groove rolls steadily from the outset, anchored by a clean low-end and understated percussion framework that prioritises hypnotic continuity over aggressive impact. JP Lantieri avoids overcrowding the arrangement, allowing subtle textures and evolving melodic details to gradually unfold over time. The darker undertones create a sense of forward motion throughout, while the synthwave-inspired atmosphere injects a cinematic edge that separates the remix from more functional melodic techno releases. One of the remix’s strongest characteristics is contrast. The piano elements introduce warmth and emotional openness against the otherwise shadowy framework, creating moments of lift without sacrificing momentum. At 124 BPM, the track sits perfectly within contemporary melodic techno and progressive crossover DJ sets, offering flexibility for both warm-up progression and deeper mid-set storytelling. This is a refined DJ-focused remix that rewards patience, layering, and long blends.

  31. 55

    Solar Storm

    Solar Storm is engineered for impact. At 143 BPM, it sits at the faster, more aggressive end of modern trance, pushing into tech-trance territory while maintaining a strong melodic identity. The low-end is tight and driving, with percussive elements reinforcing forward momentum. The acid influence introduces an additional layer of tension and character, giving the track a darker, more aggressive edge during the main sections. The breakdown is where the track expands. Here, the energy shifts into a euphoric, uplifting space, combining melodic trance elements with atmospheric progression. This contrast between aggression and uplift is what gives the track its versatility. The drop reintroduces intensity with clarity and purpose, delivering a payoff that is both powerful and controlled. This is a track designed for DJs who want: - Energy - Contrast - Control over tension and release It works equally well for trance purists and DJs leaning into harder, tech-driven sets.

  32. 54

    Apocalyptic

    Apocalyptic is built around a balance of emotional depth and driving trance energy. The melodic structure leans into progressive-style layering, gradually building atmosphere before delivering a strong euphoric payoff. The low-end is tight and controlled, locking into a 138 BPM groove that feels both modern and DJ-friendly. The synth work is expressive and melodic, creating a sense of journey rather than immediate impact, which makes it highly effective in longer sets. Breakdowns are deeper and more immersive than standard uplifting trance, allowing DJs to create emotional tension before releasing into energetic, melodic drops that retain clarity and power. This is a record designed for progression, storytelling, and controlled energy release — ideal for DJs who want to take a crowd on a journey rather than just deliver constant high-impact drops.

  33. 53

    Beyond (Original)

    Beyond is engineered for one purpose: peak-time dominance. The track operates at 138 BPM, sitting in the optimal tempo range for modern tech trance, allowing it to bridge uplifting and harder trance sets while maintaining relentless forward momentum. The arrangement is aggressive and tightly structured, built around: - Driving, fast-paced percussion - High-energy bass movement - Euphoric but forceful synth leads - Explosive drop sections with maximum payoff The absence of vocals is a strategic advantage. It gives DJs complete flexibility to layer, blend, and maintain control over the energy flow without vocal clashes. The melodic elements bring euphoria, but they are delivered with intensity rather than softness — creating a powerful contrast between emotional uplift and raw drive. The drop sections are the defining feature: They are designed for impact, reaction, and physical dancefloor response — not passive listening. This is a track that commands attention, not one that sits in the background.

  34. 52

    Young & Free

    Young And Free is a tightly produced, high-impact trance record built around melodic progression, energy control, and dancefloor cohesion. The absence of vocals shifts the focus entirely onto the melodic structure and arrangement, allowing the synth layers, arps, and progression to carry the emotional weight of the track. The uplifting leads provide the euphoric core, while the underlying rhythmic elements introduce a subtle psy-trance drive that keeps momentum consistent throughout. The breakdowns are structured to create anticipation without losing forward motion, and the drops deliver a clean, energetic payoff designed for large sound systems. Acid textures add a modern edge without overpowering the core trance identity. This is a DJ-focused record that prioritises flow, energy continuity, and crowd unification over gimmicks or commercial shortcuts.

  35. 51

    AMC - Remedy [Extended Mix]

    Remedy is built around a strong emotional core, driven by a standout vocal performance that carries the listener through the arrangement. The progression is deliberate and effective, gradually layering energy through percussion, melodic elements, and tension-building synth work. The breakdown allows the vocal to fully breathe, creating a strong emotional anchor before the drop lands with clarity and power. The drop delivers classic AMC energy — tight low-end, driving rhythm, and signature acid synth injections that give the track identity and edge. The balance between emotional storytelling and dancefloor impact makes this highly effective across both club environments and listener platforms.

  36. 50

    Paul Ross - I fall, I rise + Mirror

    This is a two-track release designed to cover both ends of a trance DJ set. “I Fall, I Rise” is the headline weapon. Built around a strong vocal hook, driving 138 BPM energy, and classic euphoric structure, it delivers a high-impact peak-time moment. The influence of early 2000s UK trance is clear, but the production is clean, modern, and festival-ready. The breakdown is emotionally loaded, the build is tension-driven, and the drop delivers full payoff. This is designed for hands-in-the-air moments and maximum crowd reaction. “Mirror” serves as the counterbalance. It strips back the intensity and leans into melody, atmosphere, and space. The track is more introspective, giving DJs a tool for transition, reset, or emotional storytelling.

  37. 49

    Cara Edwards - Move your body

    Cara Edwards - Move your body by EML Recordings

  38. 48

    Danny Dodson - This Moment

    This Moment is built for momentum, speed, and emotional payoff. The track establishes its identity quickly with tight, clean production and forward-driving rhythm. The elevated 145 BPM tempo gives it urgency and energy from the outset, immediately separating it from slower uplifting records. The vocal is the emotional anchor, guiding the listener through the arrangement and elevating the track beyond pure energy into something more memorable and impactful. The builds are sharp, tech-influenced, and designed to create tension efficiently, leading into drops that deliver with clarity, weight, and precision. This is a record designed to: - Drive high-energy dancefloors - Deliver emotional vocal connection - Maintain relentless momentum - Hit hard in peak-time environments

  39. 47

    DJ Cara -What you do to me [EML]

    DJ Cara delivers What You Do To Me, a vocal driven house cut built for the dancefloor from the very first beat. Anchored by stunning, soulful vocals and a groove led foundation, the track channels that timeless club energy the kind that locks in a crowd and refuses to let go. With crisp percussion, rolling basslines, and a polished, high impact finish, this is a record designed for peak-time moments and late night connection alike. strikes the perfect balance between modern production and classic house sensibility, making it equally at home in underground sets and wider club rotations. Expertly mastered by Rondon, the track hits with clarity, warmth, and power across every system.

  40. 46

    Funky Resistance - Modern Day Idols - Lost In Time Mix [Sub Gen]

    Modern Day Idols is built around concept, emotion, and contrast. The vocal theme explores identity, pressure, and modern influence, giving the release narrative weight beyond standard club records. Lost In Time Mix: - Deep harmonic layering - Liquid-style flow - Emotional pull and restraint - Slow-burn progression - Designed to pull the listener inward Original Mix: - Tight drum structure - Controlled rhythm patterns - Clean, modern DnB engineering - Predictable phrasing for DJ usability - More direct dancefloor application The contrast between the two creates a complete release: - Emotion vs control - Atmosphere vs precision - Depth vs structure This is a release built to: - Provide emotional storytelling within DnB sets - Offer DJs both depth and reliability - Extend set dynamics beyond pure energy

  41. 45

    Lerry Müller - Shadow In The Light (original mix)

    Shadow In The Light is built around emotional progression. The vocal acts as the anchor, guiding the listener through a journey that moves between highs and lows. The melody is the core driver, delivering the emotional pull while the groove keeps everything grounded. The structure is not about impact — it is about flow: - Smooth transitions - Layered melodic development - Controlled energy shifts - Strong atmospheric presence The production is clean and intentional, allowing space for the vocal and melody to breathe. This is a record built to: - Create emotional connection on the dancefloor - Support mid-set progression - Provide contrast within higher-energy sets

  42. 44

    Flukus - Feels Like A Dream

    Feels Like A Dream is built around identity and recognisability. The central lead, driven by a pitch-bent synth hook, gives the track its signature sound. This is what separates it from generic mainstage records — it’s instantly identifiable. The groove is tight, funky, and controlled, allowing the energy to stay high without becoming chaotic. The flow across the edits is consistent, making it DJ-friendly and versatile. The arrangement is clean and effective: - Strong intro for mixing - Clear build-ups - High-impact drops - Memorable lead continuity This is a record built to: - Stand out in a mainstage set - Deliver repeatable crowd reaction - Provide a recognisable hook DJs can rely on

  43. 43

    Kilo - Elevate + Whiteout [Sub Generation Records]

    Sub Generation Records welcomes Kilo with a two-track vocal Drum & Bass release showcasing both club energy and underground edge. Whiteout delivers a modern DnB sound built on a catchy sub bass riff, crisp percussion and a clean vocal, creating a driving, peak-time ready record. On the flip, Elevate takes a darker, more minimal approach, blending tech and electro influences with a raw, slightly industrial feel and deeper groove. Together, Whiteout / Elevate highlights Kilos versatility, moving from polished dancefloor energy to more underground territory.

  44. 42

    XidosMusic - Ruin

    Ruin is built for impact, control, and peak-time dominance. The track combines euphoric uplift with raw aggression, creating a dual-layered experience that hits both emotionally and physically. The progression is strong and DJ-focused, with clear structure designed for build, release, and crowd reaction. The “hands in the air” identity is driven by the uplifting trance core, while the mechanical, driving elements bring weight and intensity that push it into modern tech-leaning territory. The breakdowns build tension effectively without losing energy, and the drops deliver with force. This is not subtle — it is designed to command attention.

  45. 41

    M z K - Energy [Sub Generation]

    Energy is driven by groove first, not melody. The broken beat structure immediately pulls the listener in, creating movement without relying on speed. The percussion is predictable in a positive way — it locks the crowd into rhythm and creates that addictive, repeatable dancefloor momentum. The standout element is the snare work. Hard-hitting, physical, and impactful, it gives the track weight and presence on a system. Combined with the synth bassline, the low-end and mid-range work together to create a punchy, body-focused experience. There’s no need for vocal hooks or over-complex arrangement. This is a DJ tool designed to control the floor through rhythm, impact, and groove. This is a record built to: - Lock dancers into a rhythm - Maintain energy without oversaturation - Deliver physical impact through drums and bass

  46. 40

    AMC - Afraid To Feel (Extended Mix) | EML

    Afraid To Feel is a high-energy euphoric vocal trance record built for hands-in-the-air moments. A fast, driving rhythm powers the track forward while uplifting chord progressions and bright lead melodies create a sense of lift and release. The vocal delivers the emotional core — vulnerable, urgent, and memorable — before the arrangement opens into an explosive, feel-good payoff that’s made for peak-time listening. It’s the kind of trance that hits both emotionally and physically: big, uplifting, and undeniably anthemic. Perfect for trance fans who want energy, melody, and a vocal hook that sticks.

  47. 39

    Lerry Muêller - No More Signs (original mix)

    No More Signs is a precision-built progressive house track designed for DJs who value control, flow, and subtle energy progression rather than explosive drops. The groove is anchored by tight percussion, rolling kicks, and crisp hi-hats that maintain consistent forward motion. The low-end is clean and balanced, allowing the track to sit comfortably in longer blends without overpowering adjacent records. Melodically, the track leans into restrained tension rather than full emotional release. Synth layers and textures create a sense of movement and anticipation, but the arrangement avoids over-saturation, keeping the focus on groove and structure. This is a DJ-focused record that prioritises usability and flow over instant impact. It works as a connector track, a set-builder, and a momentum driver within progressive and melodic sets.

  48. 38

    Flukus- What Happened (Original Mix)

    “What Happened” is a fully immersive vocal trance record designed to pull the listener inward rather than push outward. The defining characteristic of the track is its melodic storytelling. The lead synths behave almost like a vocal presence — expressive, haunting, and guiding — creating the sense of an emotional narrative without words. The arrangement unfolds gradually, allowing tension and atmosphere to build organically. Rather than relying on aggressive drops, the track uses progression, layering, and space to create impact.

  49. 37

    Dan Dodson Ft Carol Ann - About You

    Dan Dodson Ft Carol Ann - About You by EML Recordings

  50. 36

    Davox & Lorna James - I Lost Myself [EDM Addicts]

    Davor Devcic & Lorna James deliver a powerful progressive house journey that bridges eras; blending modern production with the spirit of 90s trance nostalgia. Built around a deep, evolving groove, the track unfolds with precision and intent, drawing listeners into a hypnotic atmospheric landscape. Lorna James' spoken-word vocals add a cinematic edge, guiding the narrative with subtle intensity rather than overt emotion. A structured progression of layered melodies, rolling basslines, and atmospheric textures builds steadily toward a mainstage-ready payoff, capturing both.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

EML Recordings is a UK based Electronic Dance music label. Established in October 2009, EMLrepresents an army of Dance Music Producers, DJ’s, Radio Show Hosts, Event Organisers and Music Industry Professionals.EML Recordings is a name synonymous with ground breaking Electronic Dance music. We have growing support and we are committed to bringing you the best in new electronic music from around the world.In a world where many music labels are falling by the wayside, we stick to our motto "AS THE GIANTS FALL...WE RISE"Specializing in all styles and sub genres of House / Trance / Techno.We have something for everyone, so feel free to have a look around, and enjoy the music. http://www.emlrecordings.org/We have launched 2 new labels in 2012 Sub Generation Records, which focuses solely on Drum N Bass, Dubstep, and Breaks.4LayZee Records, which focuses on Deep House, Down Tempo, Chill, and Electronica.******You will find tracks from all 3 labels posted on this profile*****

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How many episodes does EML Recordings Music Feed have?

EML Recordings Music Feed currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is EML Recordings Music Feed about?

EML Recordings is a UK based Electronic Dance music label. Established in October 2009, EMLrepresents an army of Dance Music Producers, DJ’s, Radio Show Hosts, Event Organisers and Music Industry Professionals.EML Recordings is a name synonymous with ground breaking Electronic Dance music. We have...

How often does EML Recordings Music Feed release new episodes?

EML Recordings Music Feed has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Who hosts EML Recordings Music Feed?

EML Recordings Music Feed is created and hosted by EML Recordings.
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