Whethan Returns With WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 On SoundCloud as his viral remix series enters its second installment *]:pointer-events-auto R6Vx5W_threadScrollVars scroll-mb-[calc(var(--scroll-root-safe-area-inset-bottom,0px)+var(--thread-response-height))] scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id="request-WEB:f956d520-6508-458a-b7b5-ba8e58b89566-77" data-turn-id-container="request-WEB:f956d520-6508-458a-b7b5-ba8e58b89566-77" data-testid="conversation-turn-154" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn="assistant"> Whethan returned with WAREHOUSE.WAVS2, the second installment of his viral remix series, released exclusively on SoundCloud before his EDC Las Vegas set at bassPOD on Sunday, May 17 from 2:30 AM to 3:30 AM. The project pulls from the records currently appearing in his live sets, with edits of A$AP Rocky’s Distorted Records, Breathe Carolina’s Blackout, Kaskade’s Move For Me, Turnstile’s BIRDS, The Pack’s Vans, and several early 2000s and 2010s rap staples. Following his return to bass and
dubstep in 2025, WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 brings his current SoundCloud era into focus through live-tested flips, heavier production, internet-era references, and the underground pop-up culture now surrounding his shows. Whethan Packs WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 With Rap Throwbacks, Dance Classics, And Heavier Edits WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 brings together records Whethan has been playing in his recent live sets, with the tracklist moving across rap nostalgia, festival-era electronic music, hardcore influence, and heavier bass edits. A$AP Rocky’s Distorted Records, reworked with Dennett, gives the project one of its darker rap entries, while Breathe Carolina’s Blackout brings back a 2011 emo-electronic crossover record from the early
EDM boom. Kaskade’s Move For Me adds a progressive
house reference point, and Turnstile’s BIRDS pushes the tape toward the heavier crossover between hardcore and bass music. These choices make the project feel close to Whethan’s current live direction, where familiar records are being rebuilt for louder drops, SoundCloud circulation, and late-night sets. The rap side gives WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 one of its strongest threads, especially through Huey’s Pop, Lock & Drop It, Rich Boy’s Throw Some D’s, Yung Joc’s It’s Goin Down, and Lloyd Banks and Juelz Santana’s Beamer, Benz Or Bentley. These records come from different points in 2000s and early 2010s club and street rap culture, which makes their placement next to Mike WiLL Made-It, Miley Cyrus, and Juicy J’s 23 feel tied to a specific era of party records, mixtape circulation, and internet discovery. The Pack’s Vans adds another blog-era reference, bringing in the late-2000s skate and internet wave that fits the tape’s SoundCloud-first format. Across the full tracklist, Whethan treats these records as source material for the bass and dubstep direction he returned to in 2025, turning recognizable hooks and cultural references into edits made for live sets, online clips, warehouse pop-ups, and his current heavier run. Whethan’s Bass Return Is Turning Live Edits Into Real Demand Whethan’s return to bass and dubstep has not stayed limited to SoundCloud clips or one-off set moments. Since moving back into heavier production in 2025, his remix videos and live edits have helped push a visible surge across Instagram, TikTok, and SoundCloud, with nearly 90,000 fans signed up through Laylo for shows, releases, and pop-ups. That kind of response gives WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 more context than a standard remix-series drop, because these tracks are connected to a run that has already moved from online attention into packed rooms, late-night edits, and faster demand around his shows. That demand has also shown up offline, with sold-out headline dates across
Los Angeles, Chicago,
New York, and Denver, plus underground warehouse pop-ups around the country reaching capacity within minutes. His current festival run has expanded the same heavier direction onto larger stages, including appearances tied to Coachella’s Do LaB, EDC Las Vegas, Electric Forest, and Lollapalooza. With support from names including Subtronics, John Summit, GriZ, and DJ DIESEL, Whethan’s bass era is now moving across several parts of the scene at once: festival crowds, underground pop-ups, internet remix culture, and the SoundCloud-first audience that made WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 the right format for this chapter. WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 Keeps Whethan’s Remix Series Close To The Fans WAREHOUSE.WAVS2 keeps the remix series connected to the audience already following Whethan’s edits online and hearing them at shows. The project stays close to the way this run has been moving in real time, with flips appearing in sets, clips spreading online, and listeners going to SoundCloud to find the versions they have been hearing in those moments. That format fits the second installment because it keeps the series direct, fast, and connected to the culture around his heavier production. For Whethan, the release also s