Saint Velez Embraces the Musicality of Techno with Debut LP ‘Warehouse Poetry’
Brooklyn-based DJ producer, Saint Velez serves up a blend of 10 hypnotizing tracks in his latest LP ‘Warehouse Poetry’, which landed on De-Konstrukt Records.
Saint Velez is hard at work and continues to push his signature techno sound forward. In his debut LP ‘Warehouse Poetry’, the promising DJ/producer returns with 10 tracks of sizzling studio precision fuelled with immense storytelling.
This album is a scorching record inspired by the narrative in Liam Neeson within the movie, The Gray. Each track navigates through fantastical synths and basslines to cut through the meaning of deep passion and going through the daily tribulations of the average listener.
Kicking off with the opener “Once More Into The Fray”, there is no better way than introducing a skyrocketing anthemic energy into the album. With relentless beats and booming synth layers throughout the record, every track invites the listeners into his sonic playground.
Saint Velez also teams up with other techno tastemakers like Subfractal in the track “Into the Last Good Fight”, AK27 on “Imagined the Damned” and also the rising producer, Ramsey Neville on the track “On This Day”. The closing title of the album, “Warehouse Poetry”, which shares the same title as the LP, delivers an edgier styling with layered loops to cement Saint Valez’s stellar ability in the realm of techno and house music.
Since releasing an impressive array of singles and EPs across various label imprints like Back In Black Recording and Autektone Dark, Saint Velez is stepping up to become one of the most compelling producers to watch. He brought his bag of sonic offerings to live performance venues like Avant Gardner and H0L0, even opening for DJ Enrico Sangiuliano and playing for other artists like Desna and Camea.
With brilliant elements of meaningful lyricality at the forefront of this swelling new LP, Saint Velez is glowing in the dance music scene and stands out as one of the truly remarkable artist to watch.
Listen to “Warehouse Poetry” here:
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