Feel the Volume
Jauz
Jauz built his early reputation on tracks that felt simultaneously rooted in house music's warmth and amplified to festival-scale proportions, and Feel the Volume exemplifies that balance almost perfectly. The groove here is genuine — there's a hip-hop-influenced swing to the drum programming that keeps it from feeling sterile — while the bass elements carry enough weight to satisfy the crowd demanding something physically commanding. The production has an infectious confidence to it, a sense that every element was chosen because it genuinely excited the producer rather than because it fulfilled a commercial template. The emotional texture is celebratory without being saccharine — there's grit in the low end that keeps the euphoria honest. In cultural terms this represents the moment when future bass and house started bleeding together in a way that introduced harder electronic music to audiences who'd grown up on more melodic fare. You'd reach for this during the pre-game hour when the night is still full of possibility and you want the energy to build slowly.
fast
2010s
warm, punchy, infectious
American future bass and house fusion, festival circuit
Electronic, House. Bass House. euphoric, energetic. Begins with a hip-hop-inflected warmth and steadily amplifies into festival-scale celebration without losing its groove.. energy 8. fast. danceability 9. valence 8. vocals: minimal vocals, crowd-facing, celebratory. production: hip-hop swing drums, heavy bass, layered house synths. texture: warm, punchy, infectious. acousticness 1. era: 2010s. American future bass and house fusion, festival circuit. Pre-game hour when the night is still full of possibility and you want energy to build slowly.