There’s a certain kind of producer who can change the temperature of a room with one mix choice. Rockwell has always had that knack, not just for sound design, but for placement. What he leaves out. Where he lets the drums breathe. So seeing him pop up on Overview Music with Anyway / Silver Linings makes immediate sense, even if the mood here is a touch more direct than some of his more leftfield back-catalogue.

This is a two-tracker that feels written with DJs in mind. Not in a lazy “tool tune” way, more in that practical, confident sense of “this will work at 1 a.m. without you having to fight it”. The label’s own blurb flags a shift in vibe, and you can hear it. The sonics are upfront, the ideas arrive quickly, and the arrangements don’t hang about admiring themselves.

Anyway leads with drive. The drums land crisp and purposeful, sitting right at the front of the mix, while the musical elements feel engineered to create forward motion rather than atmosphere for atmosphere’s sake. It’s punchy. A little leaner than you might expect, perhaps, which is exactly why it cuts through. It has that “step into the blend and lock it” energy, the kind of track you reach for when you want to steer a set without making a big speech about it.

Silver Linings brings a different shade, still club-ready, still tight, but with a slightly more reflective undercurrent. Not dramatic, not syrupy, just enough tonal lift to change the room’s expression. I found myself thinking about long transitions with this one, those patient, 64-bar mixes where the basslines overlap and the crowd gradually realises something has shifted. That’s where it really lives.

Overall, Anyway / Silver Linings is Rockwell doing what he does best: nudging expectations sideways while keeping the mechanics razor sharp. It’s clean, bold, and very playable. The kind of release that ends up staying in your folder longer than you planned, because it keeps finding new uses.

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