There is something oddly satisfying about hearing a song you half-recognise suddenly snap into 174 BPM focus. Turn The Lights Off does exactly that. A collaboration between John B, The Young Punx and Magellan Starchild, it takes a viral original and gives it a full-scale drum and bass rebuild, polished, bright, and unapologetically aimed at the big moments.

John B has never been shy of colour or crossover, and that instinct is all over this track. The drums hit clean and hard, with that familiar modern snap, while the low end stays tight rather than aggressive. It leaves plenty of space for Brendan Reilly’s vocal, which is treated less like a hook to be chopped up and more like the emotional centre of the record. Big chorus, hands-in-the-air energy, no embarrassment about it.

The synth work is widescreen and glossy, pushing into festival territory without tipping into parody. You can hear the lineage clearly. Touches that recall the maximalist end of the spectrum associated with Sub Focus, the punchy clarity of Culture Shock, and the melodic drive that has become second nature for 1991. That might sound like name-checking, but it matters here. This is a track that understands where it will be played.

In a club, it is pure release. DJs barely need to work it. Drop, wait, reload if you are feeling generous. At a festival, it is even more obvious. The arrangement is built for scale, with clear peaks and a sense of forward momentum that never really lets up. Maybe it is a bit too clean for the heads who want grit and risk, but that is kind of the point. This is about connection, about a shared rush rather than heads-down introspection.

What keeps Turn The Lights Off from feeling disposable is the attention to detail. The mixdown is immaculate. The transitions are smooth without being predictable. Even the vocal processing feels considered rather than slapped on. It sounds expensive, but not hollow.

Released on 13 February 2026 via DDRRAAGG, this is a single that knows its lane and stays in it. Not everything needs to reinvent the wheel. Sometimes you just want a track that lights up a room, makes sense in a playlist, and still bangs on a proper system. This does. Maybe that is enough. Probably it is.

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