Review: The Hoom Side of the Sun compilation series has previously delivered two expansive volumes of soul-warming, tech-tinged deep house goodness, each packed with tracks that tend towards the exotic, emotive and intoxicating. Volume three, which lands 12 months after its predecessor and presents a similarly sunny and atmospheric blend of high-grade cuts. For proof, check out the clips of Hreach's hypnotic but stirring 'Blue Road', the percussion-rich deep-tech loveliness of Lucien's 'Lluvia', the fluttering summer breeze beauty of 'Virtue' by Hermanez, and the psychedelic, trance-inducing dancefloor psychedelia of Luka Sambe's 'The Juggle'.
Review: Deep house producer Erdi Irmak has been in fine form this year. "Tomorrow Never Comes" is remarkably Imrak's sixth single of the year, with more due to drop in the coming weeks. First head for attractive EP opener "After All", where warm, swelling strings, deep piano motifs and lilting, acid-style lead lines rise above layered drums and groovy bass, before admiring the similarly percussive but more tech-tinged deep house flex of "Gray". Arguably best of all though is title track "Tomorrow Never Comes", a sunrise-ready shuffle through tactile deep house pastures in the company of glistening lead lines, jazzy guitar motifs, tumbling pianos, delightfully opaque chords and heady female vocal samples.
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