Some vocal drum and bass tracks collapse the moment the drop arrives. Too much build, not enough payoff. Universe avoids that completely because the energy stays connected to the emotion all the way through.
Jrace & Albert White have clearly built this one for bigger moments in a set. You can hear why it has become a regular closing tune for them almost immediately. The intro stretches out through warm synth layers and Eda Hinkova’s vocal sitting cleanly across the centre of the mix, gradually tightening the tension without rushing itself towards the drop.
When the drums land, the track opens properly.
The low-end carries real weight, but the groove stays controlled enough that the vocal never gets buried underneath the pressure. Smaller melodic details keep surfacing around the drums as well, especially through the higher synth textures drifting in and out behind the bass movement.
There is a strong sense of pacing throughout the arrangement. Rather than constantly chasing switch-ups, the track lets the vocal and groove do most of the work. That restraint helps the bigger moments land harder once they arrive.
Eda Hinkova’s contribution is central to the track working as well as it does. The vocal never feels pasted over the instrumental afterwards. Everything moves together naturally, especially during the longer builds, where the atmosphere keeps widening underneath her phrasing.
Musically, the release sits somewhere between modern vocal drum and bass and melodic jump up without leaning too heavily into either side. The bass design still punches hard enough for peak-time dancefloors, but there is enough space left inside the mix for the track to breathe properly on headphones too.
The second half especially feels carefully arranged. Additional layers begin surfacing quietly around the vocal while the drums stay tight and driving underneath. Nothing feels overcrowded, which is not always easy once tracks like this start building momentum.
Released through Glitch Records, Universe also gives a good sense of where Jrace & Albert White seem to be pushing their sound currently. Bigger melodic focus, wider atmosphere, but still grounded firmly in dancefloor movement rather than pure crossover polish.
That balance is what gives the track its staying power.
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