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Dias Ridge Comes Back to Magnetic Magazine Recordings for the Label’s 50th Release

Magnetic Magazine Recordings hits a real marker with its 50th release, and bringing Dias Ridge back for that spot feels right. Interstice / Balance lands on Mar...

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Dias Ridge Comes Back to Magnetic Magazine Recordings for the Label’s 50th Release - EDM news article

Summary of the article

Magnetic Magazine Recordings hits a real marker with its 50th release, and bringing Dias Ridge back for that spot feels right. Interstice / Balance lands on March 27, 2026, as MMR050, and it does a strong job of showing the kind of record this label has been building toward.

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Magnetic Magazine Recordings hits a real marker with its 50th release, and bringing Dias Ridge back for that spot feels right. Interstice / Balance lands on March 27, 2026, as MMR050, and it does a strong job of showing the kind of record this label has been building toward. Dias Ridge works inside melodic house, but he does not keep the formula too clean or too safe. These tracks carry the groove and pacing you want from that lane, yet they also introduce breakbeat movement and a level of production detail that give the release its own identity. Snag It On Beatport Here From my point of view, that is what separates this one from a lot of melodic house that comes through the inbox every week. It has club function, but it also has enough detail in the programming and arrangement to keep revealing new things as you sit with it. Over the last year and a half of Magnetic Magazine Recordings, this is one of the releases I would point to quickly when talking about the label’s strongest material. Magnetic Magazine · Dias Ridge – Interstice (Extended Mix) Magnetic Magazine · Dias Ridge – Balance (Extended Mix) A return that feels perfect There is a clear reason this release works as a catalog milestone. Dias Ridge understands how to write for DJs without flattening the personality out of the record. The low end stays locked, the drums move with purpose, and the phrasing gives each section enough space to develop without dragging things out. That is a hard balance to hit, especially in melodic house, where a lot of records can start to blur together once you strip away the headline synths and polished artwork. What I like here is that Interstice / Balance keeps the groove front and center while still adding enough edge to hold your attention. The breakbeat touches change the energy in a useful way, and the sound design gives the tracks a little extra tension and motion without pushing them into something overly technical. You can hear the care in how the layers are built, how the transitions are handled, and how the tracks stay focused on movement from start to finish. That makes these records easy to picture in a set, but it also makes them strong enough to stand on their own outside of one. Early support says a lot The early response has also been strong, and in this case it comes from names who carry real credibility in this lane. Sasha has already downloaded the release for consideration, Nick Warren called the tracks “Very cool,” and Anthony Pappa wrote, “Nice tracks. Thank you.” Eran Aviner added that “Both tracks are very nice, will check them out! Goodluck!” On top of that, Black Coffee has also given the release strong praise, which says plenty about how far this one can travel outside a narrow progressive or melodic pocket. That support lines up with what the music is doing. Interstice / Balance is polished, but it does not come off overly manicured. It is thoughtful, but it still works in a live setting where records need to move people quickly. For Magnetic Magazine Recordings, that makes this a smart release for MMR050. For Dias Ridge, it reads like a return that sharpens his place on the label and gives the catalog one of its strongest recent entries. The post Dias Ridge Comes Back to Magnetic Magazine Recordings for the Label’s 50th Release appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

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