Jeremy Underground
Mixmag Lab London
Jeremy Underground lives up to his name, delivering a Mixmag Lab London set that feels beamed in from a perfect, forgotten 90s house party where the vibe was everything. This is soulful, vocal-heavy house music for dancing, not for posing—a reminder that sometimes the oldest tricks are the best. The room hums with a genuine, unforced happiness, all shared smiles and classic tunes. The technical approach is deceptively simple: a rock-steady 125 BPM groove provides the backbone, while the keys dance between the soulful 12A, the deeper 3B, and the funky 4B.
The energy balance is classic party house: a solid, funky low-end, a prominent mid-range packed with punchy drums and bright piano stabs, and enough high-end sparkle to keep it all feeling lively. Jeremy's mixing is respectful and crowd-pleasing, often letting anthems like Robin S.'s 'Show Me Love' or Sunscreem's 'Pressure US' play out to their full, hands-in-the-air potential before smoothly blending into the next gem. The track selection is a joyous deep dive. Starting with the obscure, gospel-tinged boogie of Thunderbolt's 'Love Is So Funny' is a deep digger's flex.
Lenny Fontana's 'Stand up and Believe' delivers pure, uplifting vocal house. The inclusion of a track like Jax Jones & MNEK's 'Where Did You Go?' showcases his ability to blend contemporary pop-house into a classic framework seamlessly. Juan Pablo Moran's 'Life On White' is a beautiful, Balearic-tinged deep house cut, and Claptone & Mylo's 'Drop the Pressure' is a modern classic that fits like a glove. The journey is a feel-good marathon: it kicks off with soulful warmth, hits peak celebration with the timeless 'Show Me Love', and winds down with the wistful, instrumental melancholy of HNNY's 'Yearning'.