Some intros give the game away too early. At All Costs holds it back just enough.

Artino and Genetics open this one with a cinematic stretch that feels properly considered, not just a pad and a riser thrown in for the sake of it. There is movement in the background, subtle shifts in tone, little swells that hint at what is coming without spelling it out. You get that sense of pacing early, which helps.

When the vocal lands, it sticks. Lottie Jones carries the centre of the track with a clean, melodic hook that feels built for repeat listens rather than instant overload. It is catchy, yeah, but not in a forced way. There is space around it, and that works well. You can hear the phrasing properly, which is not always the case with busier liquid arrangements.

The drop keeps things tidy. Rolling drums, no unnecessary clutter, and a bassline that does its job without trying to dominate the whole mix. It sits in that comfortable pocket where DJs can actually use it, blend it, let it run. Maybe layer it with something slightly tougher underneath if you want more bite. Or just leave it as is. It holds.

What stands out is the way the synths are handled. Those wide, rising layers come in waves, pushing and pulling the energy without ever tipping into overload. There is a slight illusion of tempo shift in the way they move, almost like the track is breathing in and out. Subtle, but it keeps things from feeling static across the second drop.

Released via Liquicity Records, the tune sits right in that polished, melodic corner of the label’s output. Clean edges, strong vocal focus, and a structure that works across radio, streams, and longer club blends. You can see where it fits.

It knows exactly where it sits. It lets the groove roll, gives the vocal room, and doesn’t overreach. In a set, that kind of control goes a long way.

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