Chris Lake and Ragie Ban Reimagine 90s Basic for New Home Banger, "Toxic"

Date:

Chris Lake has teamed up with rising Brazilian DJ and producer Ragie Ban to launch “Toxic,” a home heater with a brand new jack swing twist.

Out now by way of Lake’s Black E-book Data, “Toxic” arrives hotly anticipated. The monitor had change into a fan-favorite, turning heads because the home music celebrity first teased it in his current DJ set at Costa Rica’s Ocaso Music Competition. 

On the core of “Toxic” lies a genius pattern: Bell Biv DeVoe’s 1990 basic “Poison,” which the producers reimagine with a snarling bassline and crackling percussion. The nostalgic vocal loop provides simply the correct quantity of swagger, lending to a monitor that is as timeless as it’s trailblazing—true to kind for Lake.

A monitor constructed for peak-hour dancefloors, “Toxic” marks one other gorgeous chapter in the home music virtuoso’s ever-evolving sound whereas additionally spotlighting Ban’s knack for uncooked, percussive membership music. With performances lined up at Coachella’s first-ever “Thursday Night Campgrounds” present on April tenth, plus competition slots at Breakaway and Escapade, the monitor is primed to change into a staple of Lake’s summer season arsenal.

Take heed to “Toxic” under and discover the brand new single on streaming platforms right here.

Comply with Chris Lake:

X: x.com/chrislake
Instagram: instagram.com/chrislake
TikTok: tiktok.com/@chrislake
Fb: fb.com/chrislake
Spotify: spoti.fi/3auKRRk

Comply with Ragie Ban:

X: x.com/RagieBan
Instagram: instagram.com/ragieban
TikTok: tiktok.com/@ragieban
Spotify: bit.ly/3FI419P

Share post:

Subscribe

Latest Article's

More like this
Related

‘Playground’: Michel Petrucciani Experiments On Blue Notice

Michel Petrucciani’s penultimate album for Blue Notice Data, Playground,...

Pink Bull B2B to Make Explosive US Debut in Detroit

Taking up the birthplace of techno subsequent month, Pink...

Slayer In 20 Songs: The Thrash Steel Legends’ Most Hell-Elevating Moments

Metallica might have been a lot larger, Anthrax much...