Bambounou
Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris, France for Cercle
Of course it's a Cercle set at the Institut du Monde Arabe; we're all here for the architectural porn and the quiet hope that Bambounou will make those geometric patterns pulse in time. The Parisian sunset glints off the mosaic facade, but inside it's all shadow and sub-bass, a temple of low-end theory. Bambounou crafts a masterclass in minimalist tension here, with a BPM that ebbs and flows around an average of 130 but feels anchored by a profound, 0.92 low-energy focus. The harmonic journey is hypnotic, predominantly locked in Camelot 12A, creating a droning, meditative state perfect for the venue's serene yet imposing atmosphere.
This isn't about drops; it's about the slow mutation of sound, where a single hi-hat or textured pad shift feels seismic. The mixing is patient and cerebral, with long, evolving tracks that prioritize atmosphere over immediacy. The crate digging is exquisite: his own remix of Yaleesa Hall's 'Woodall 0217' sets a deep, dubby tone, while Per Hammar's 'Passing By' is a lesson in subtle, driving percussion. Nail's 'Optimus' provides a burst of glitchy, modular funk, and natural/electronic.system.'s 'Megàride' is a hidden gem of atmospheric techno.
The collaboration with Coni, 'Medusa', adds a layer of eerie, vocal-tinged mystery. He opens with that immersive Yaleesa Hall remix, builds a peak around the skittering rhythms of 'Optimus', and dissolves everything into the 21-minute ambient drone of Sardar Ali Banosi's 'Ajeeba Meena Wa', a closing track so patient it feels like the room itself is exhaling.