Nia Archives
The Lab London
The search for that perfect, weightless amen break that makes your stomach drop is a sacred quest. Nia Archives, in The Lab London, served up a drum & bass sermon that was equal parts jungle history lesson and future-facing manifesto. The vibe was dense and humid, all strobe-lit sweat and bass pressure, the kind of session where you don't dance so much as get moved by the rhythm. Technically, this is high-velocity stuff, averaging a fierce 165 BPM with a key spread that favours the urgent tension of 12A and 3A. The energy profile is classic D&B: a powerful, sub-bass low-end (0.51 avg) holding the fort, supported by crisp mids (0.38) for the breaks and stabs, with just enough high-end (0.11) to keep the percussion razor-sharp.
Her mixing is fast and confident, cutting and double-dropping with the precision of a veteran. The crate digging is exceptional, bridging decades. The opener, 'Kid Lib - Time II Dance', is a modern jungle bomb with vintage soul. 'Bow Street Runner - Murderous Style' brings that dark, stepping pressure. 'Dead Man’s Chest - Myth & Fire' is a subterranean roller for the heads, while 'Sempra - Celestial' offers a moment of ethereal, almost trance-like respite.
The inclusion of 'Subnation - Wickedest One' is a deep cut nod to '90s hardcore, and 'Orytor - Soul Searching' shows her ear for contemporary, melodic jungle. The journey kicks off with the infectious swing of 'Time II Dance', reaches a fever pitch with the chaotic breaks of a track like 'DJ Die - Clear Skyz (1996 VIP)', and winds down with the rude boy swagger of 'Just Jungle - Come Fi Nice It Up Special (2021 Remix)'. A highlight reel for anyone who believes drum & bass is a feeling, not just a BPM.