Interview
Basslines & Bros: Behind the Beat with Flux Pavilion and Doctor P
Amid the bass-fueled chaos of Ultra Music Festival, we caught up with two legends who helped shape the sound of dubstep as we know it—Flux Pavilion and Doctor P. From early UK raves to global festival stages, these longtime collaborators have seen it all—and they’re still dropping heat. We sat down to talk legacy, evolution, and what keeps them inspired in 2025.
So, how long have you two been friends?
Doctor P: 22 years I think..? Maybe 23?
Flux Pavilion: Yeah, I think 23 years.
And how did you two meet?
Doctor P: We went to the same school, we are from the same town. We kind of met by chance- and were really the only two people in our town that were making music.
Flux Pavilion: We actually started our first band together when I was 13.

Who were your biggest inspirations to make music when you two first started?
Doctor P: I really liked Fatboy Slim. He was a big influence.
Flux Pavilion: Same. We really grew up listening to the same music, so our taste has been very similar over the years.
Let’s talk about Flux Pavilion and Doctor P as a DJ duo. Have you performed together before?
Flux Pavilion: Yes, this is our third time performing B2B at Ultra actually. But- it is out first time performing as an official DJ pair.
What is it like performing together? Do you plan to continue doing this beyond this tour?
Doctor P: Yeah, that’s the plan. Doctor P and Flux Pavilion has kind of become a thing that we’re going to do.
Flux Pavilion: For the foreseeable future anyway. We’re going to do this album, tour this album, and potentially even do a bigger version of the album.. maybe. And then after that, who knows? We really don’t know, so let’s just pretend this is never happening again. We may never get the opportunity to perform and tour together like this- so let’s act like this is the only time and have fun with it. That’s the mentality that has been fueling me through this.
Have you two thought about coming up with a collaborative name for your duo- like ‘Doctor Flux’?
Doctor P: Yeah, that actually occurred to me right at the very beginning when we first started talking about the album. And then we were like nah, let’s not do that.
Flux Pavilion: I view it as, this isn’t a rebrand. We don’t need to create a new identity for the two of us. We want to continue using our names so the older ravers still recognize us, but the newer ravers continue to learn about us. I want them to know, this is why we’re popular. That’s how we want to be remembered.

Let’s talk about music, what do fans have to look forward to?
Flux Pavilion: We released a new album recently. It’s a 15-track album called ‘Doctor P & Flux Pavilion’, and we’re preparing to go on tour with it.
What is your favorite track on that album?
Doctor P: Definitely ‘Rubber Dub’
Flux Pavilion: Yeah, I agree, definitely ‘Rubber Dub’. I think objectively it’s the best one. I also really love ‘Hot Piss’. But ‘Rubber Dub’ I think is a great combination of our sound and our ideas and I’ve been most excited to play that one.
If I were to hand each of you the aux right now.. what song would you put on?
Doctor P: Lately, I’ve been listening to MP8 and Funkmaster. So I’d probably put one of them on.
Flux Pavilion: There’s an album called ‘2020’ by Richard Dawson, who’s kind of like a singer, songwriter, folk artist from the UK. His songs just remind me of England- so I listen to them a lot when I’m not home.
Catch up with Flux Pavilion & Doctor P
Connect with Flux Pavilion
Connect with Doctor P
Interview
Meet The Bausa: Norway’s Funky House Trio Taking Europe by Storm
Norwegian house trio The Bausa interview discusses breakout single Magnetic, their self-coined Scandi House sound, and what’s next for the Baerum-based three-piece.”
If you haven’t heard “Magnetic” on the radio yet, you will soon. The Bausa, a three-piece house act from Baerum, Norway, are making serious waves across Europe, and after a conversation with Fredrik, Edward, and Filip, it’s clear this is just the beginning. In The Bausa Interview, we’ll explore what sets this group apart and where they’re heading next.
The trio’s origin story is one of those happy accidents that makes for great mythology. Filip and Fredrik had been making music together for two weeks when Filip brought Edward into the picture at a high school party. “He showed me one of the tracks they made and it was so bad,” Edward laughs. “But he was interested in the whole thing, and none of my friends were making music.” A studio session at Fredrik’s home studio sealed the deal. They made a song in two hours and partied to it for the rest of the night. The Bausa was born.
The name has its own story. A friend suggested “Brødrene Bausa,” telling them it meant “boss” in German. They ran with it. Years later, on a trip to Germany, they found out it doesn’t mean that at all. “It sounds dope, it sounds cool,” Filip says, unbothered. When pressed on the actual meaning, they landed on something like “big” and “ambitious.” Close enough.

250 Tracks a Year and the Bus That Made Them
Before playlists and streaming algorithms, The Bausa were sharpening their craft in one of the most uniquely Norwegian ways imaginable: making music for russ buses. If you’re not Norwegian, this requires some explanation. Russetime is a rite of passage at the end of high school where groups of about 30 students rent or buy a bus, get it painted with their crew name and logo, commission custom songs from producers, and then party inside it every night for 30 days. They go to school during the day. They do this for a month.
One of those bus crews was called Tournée, meaning “tour” in Norwegian. They commissioned a track from The Bausa, and that song ended up becoming one of the group’s early breakthrough moments. At their peak, the trio were producing around 250 custom tracks a year for various russ groups, covering everything from hip-hop to drum and bass. “We got a lot of training from that,” Edward says. “We were mixing and mastering the tracks as well.” It’s an unconventional music school, but the output speaks for itself.

Finding Their Sound
Today The Bausa describe their music as “Scandi House,” a term they coined themselves for a style that blends disco, funk, and house in a way that didn’t fit neatly into any existing genre. Their first English-language EP came together almost by accident. They were working on a Norwegian album in January and couldn’t crack the lyrics for a particular beat, the one that would eventually become “Addicted to Your Love.” An English top line clicked where Norwegian hadn’t, and suddenly they were making an English EP.
“Magnetic,” the lead track, has been getting significant radio play across Europe, including here in the Netherlands. There’s an ease and warmth to it that translates across borders, a summery groove that feels effortless even if the work behind it wasn’t.

What’s Next
The Bausa have a busy summer ahead, with festival appearances lined up across Europe. When asked about a dream destination they haven’t played yet, the answer was India, a market with a passionate and rapidly growing electronic music fanbase that they’re clearly keeping an eye on.
As for Norway’s own scene, they’re optimistic. They see a new generation of house producers and underground DJs building something real in Oslo, and they’re quietly hinting at plans to help shape what that becomes. A house festival of their own? “We have some plans,” is all they’ll say.
In the meantime, follow The Bausa on their socials and streaming platforms. All the links are in the show notes below.
Want to hear the full conversation? Stay tuned for the complete interview, coming soon to the Ten Days in Dance podcast on Spotify.
Interview
Zehavi Interview: Aliya, Lior Narkis, And Music Without Borders
Zehavi Interview: Aliya, Lior Narkis, And Music Without Borders as he talks Aliya, Mediterranean roots, and culture-crossing electronic music
Zehavi’s music began with the sounds he grew up around, from Arabic, Moroccan, Persian, Greek, and Mediterranean melodies to the bouzouki he first learned through his father. Those early influences now sit inside his electronic productions, giving his work a personal link to tradition without pulling it away from a wider audience. In this interview, Zehavi discusses his collaboration with Lior Narkis on Aliya, the creative control behind the release, and how different languages, instruments, and cultural references can meet inside one record without losing their emotional weight.
Great to have you with us. Before we dive in, can you tell us a bit about the artists, sounds, or moments that originally drew you toward music as a profession?
Interview
Modal Nodes Talk ‘Destiny,’ ‘Jawa Dub,’ and Mystery
Modal Nodes Talk ‘Destiny,’ ‘Jawa Dub,’ and Mystery as the bass act discusses Subtronics support, sci-fi influences, and what comes next
Modal Nodes have quickly become one of bass music’s most intriguing emerging projects, pairing a mystery-led identity with a sci-fi visual world and a sound tied to their fictional origin story. Their latest dual release, Destiny and Jawa Dub, gives the project two different entry points, with Destiny connected to their first shows and Jawa Dub rooted in the alien narrative behind Modal Nodes. In this interview, Modal Nodes discuss the concept behind the project, the brutalist architecture that influences their identity, recent support from Subtronics, and what may come next as their presence in bass music continues to grow.
Modal Nodes have quickly become one of the most talked-about emerging names in bass music despite still remaining anonymous. Was the mystery always part of the project from the beginning, or did it evolve naturally alongside the music?
Modal Nodes originally started out as an abstract concept on our home planet. It wasn’t anything serious to begin with, but has since progressed farther than we ever expected.
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