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Davide Squillace makes his full Moon Harbour debut with ‘Smart Dance Stupid Floor’

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Italian tech house titan Davide Squillace makes his full Moon Harbour debut with a fantastic new single that follows a number of remixes on the label over the years.

This And That label boss and Circoloco hero Squillace has been a core part of the global house underground for many years. His sets are legendary, his productions never fail to make their mark and his friendship with Moon Harbour boss Matthias Tanzmann goes back decades and includes them working together with Martin Buttrich as part of the Better Lost Than Stupid supergroup.

Squillace shows his skills once more on ‘Smart Dance Stupid Floor,’ a high-intensity track that keeps on building. The crisp drum programming is turbocharged and constantly evolving. It is overlaid with sweeping filters, textured hits and twisted vocal loops that all add up to a fiery and unrelenting groove for the peak of the night. This is the latest in a long line of superb productions from the one and only Davide Squillace.

We grabbed a quick chat with Davide:
Hey Davide, thanks for your time. You’re having a new release on Moon Harbour. How and where did you create the track?
Hello there, the actual intention of the track is purely danced floor-oriented, didn’t mean to be too complex about arrangements, melodies or such. I miss the dancefloor a lot, sometimes in the studio I tend to be too very detailed on sound design, arrangements, etc., here I just wanted a piece of pure dancefloor energy

What is your history with Moon Harbour?
Well Matthias and myself go back a long time at Circoloco, I’ve already done releases for Moon Harbour and played lots of Matthias’ releases.

Check out ‘Smart Dance Stupid Floor’ here on Data Transmission and grab it here.

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Grahame Farmer

Grahame Farmer’s love affair with electronic music goes back to the mid-90s when he first began to venture into the UK’s beloved rave culture, finding himself interlaced with some of the country’s most seminal club spaces. A trip to dance music’s anointed holy ground of Ibiza in 1997 then cemented his sense of purpose and laid the foundations for what was to come over the next few decades of his marriage to the music industry.

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