Interview
DJ Du Jour Interview: Soulful House, Tech Energy, and the Future of 2026
DJ Du Jour has shaped her sound through a blend of soulful House and driving Tech House, influenced by artists and moments that defined her journey behind the decks. In this interview, she shares the key sounds and inspirations that helped form her musical identity.
Hi DJ Du Jour, how are you feeling today?
I’m feeling really energized and grateful. It’s an exciting time creatively, and I’m in a place where my sound and direction feel very aligned with where I want to go next.
To start, can you recall the very first record or artist that made you want to explore Electronic Music?
Fatboy Slim was a huge gateway for me. His music had this infectious energy and sense of personality that made Dance music feel exciting and accessible. It showed me that Electronic music could be both powerful on a dance floor and playful at the same time.
How did the environment you grew up in influence the specific textures and sounds you gravitate toward today?
Growing up around vibrant club culture in Australia exposed me to a wide spectrum of House music early on. The scenes I experienced celebrated freedom, community, and big emotional moments on the dance floor. That’s why my sound today leans toward uplifting vocals, groove-driven basslines, and music that connects people.
Was there a particular mentor or local DJ who helped you shape your work?
My development was shaped more by the wider scene than a single mentor. Watching experienced DJs control a room taught me the importance of patience, pacing, and storytelling in a set. Those early dance floor lessons still influence how I approach performance today.
How do you balance the classic influences and modern energy in your sets?
I think House music has this timeless foundation, but the textures evolve with each generation. I like to keep the soul and groove of classic house while bringing in modern production and tech house energy. That balance helps the music feel both familiar and fresh.
If you had to name three “foundational” artists to help understand your sound, who would they be?
Fatboy Slim for his personality and energy, James Hype for technical creativity behind the decks, and artists from the Defected family like Sam Divine who keep the spirit of house music alive while pushing it forward.
How do you stay “off-the-phone” and connected to your musical roots in an era dominated by social media trends?
For me it comes back to the dance floor. Playing live and feeling the reaction of a real crowd reminds you what actually matters in music. Social media is a tool, but the true test of a track is how it feels in a room full of people.
How do you hope to influence the next generation of women entering the Electronic scene?
I hope my journey shows that longevity and authenticity matter more than fitting a stereotype. Women belong in every space within Electronic music, from the booth to production to leadership. If my career encourages even one person to step forward confidently, that’s meaningful.
Which specific track could represent your musical DNA?
“Set You Free” by N-Trance captures a lot of the spirit that inspires me — uplifting, soulful, and built around connection. It’s the kind of record that reminds you why people fall in love with Dance music in the first place.
Which skills have you learned from watching other artists’ sets?
Watching great DJs has taught me the importance of patience and control. The best performers know when to build tension, when to release it, and how to guide the crowd through those moments. That ability to shape energy is what separates a good set from a memorable one.
Finally, looking forward to 2026, which emerging sounds or artists are currently capturing your attention and influencing your next chapter?
I’m really inspired by the continued evolution of groove-driven House and Tech House that keeps strong musicality at its core. Artists who combine powerful basslines with emotional vocals are pushing the sound forward in exciting ways. That balance between energy and feeling is something I’m leaning into more as I move into 2026.
Those influences continue to shape the way DJ Du Jour approaches the dance floor today. They remain at the heart of every set she plays, guiding the energy, emotion, and connection she creates through music.
DJ Du Jour Online
Interview
Festival Energy, Studio Chemistry: Darude & Mashd N Kutcher on the making of ‘HYPE’
Darude and Mashd N Kutcher interview discuss HYPE, their new collaborative single on Vibing Out, and how it became the anthem of the Storm 25 World Tour.
Darude and Mashd N Kutcher have joined forces for ‘HYPE’, a high energy collaboration that brings together two artists known for creating unforgettable dancefloor moments. Blending Darude’s iconic high energy sound with Mashd N Kutcher’s fresh production style, the track quickly became a standout crowd favourite during Darude’s Storm 25 anniversary live tour, calling for an official release.
In this exclusive back to back interview, both artists discuss how ‘HYPE’ came together, the creative process behind the collaboration, their live shows, and what the future holds as they head into the second half of 2026.
Darude, welcome! ‘HYPE’ became the closing moment of your STORM 25 World Tour. At what point did you realise this was not just another track, but something fans emotionally tied to the live experience?
“Well, with the name ‘HYPE’ and the chanty rap vocals that I can’t help but mumble along with every time, it very early on the tour just naturally became the track that I once more in the set hyped the crowd with and went to meet them on the dancefloor.
That shared experience and synchronised movement definitely made me feel things, and I hope the crowd did, too.
It wasn’t exactly meticulously planned like that before the tour, but as it was the last track of the set and we decided to release ‘HYPE’ as the next single, it also became the natural bridge between the remembrance of the anniversary year and tour and the next phase.”
Mashd N Kutcher come from a very different musical background and energy. What surprised or inspired you most about the way they approached your original stems?
“I sent Matt a set of stems of a track as a collaboration suggestion, and he came back to me with such deliciously mangled sounds of mine, plus critically good additions and changes. It was almost unrecognisable, but also in the very same vein, purposely nodding back and being a timeless dancefloor mover. I dug it on the first listen.
Matt has a very straightforward way of thinking and doing, and what I liked a lot was this no frills production that just worked and took over with undeniable energy! There was still enough space for me to add some melodic stuff and tweak a thing or two and then we were done!”
Tell us more about the HYPE Tour! After last year’s live show run, you’re back behind the decks. How does it feel?
“I LOVED circling back to my beginnings with the Storm 25 live tour last year, for which I remixed 25 tracks of mine and performed them live from an Ableton Live stem and live tracks project. I started my performance career with hardware sequencer, sampler, synth and effect unit back in the day, did that for a few years and then started being booked as a DJ also, which turned into over 20 years of DJ sets all over the place.
After a year of Storm 25 live sets with bespoke visuals and certain unique and programmed aspects of it each night, jumping back to DJing feels nice and fresh again! Both are great and both have their benefits. An artist live show the way I did it needs to be more planned and as such is sort of more limited for the performer. You can’t go left and right at any given moment like you can when you’re DJing and have all the tracks in the world to choose from, not just your own.
When DJing there’s a bit more freedom to read the crowd and course correct if need be, whereas playing an artist set is more like “This is what I’m presenting you, like it or not.” Though I had planned my live set as best as I could to work like my DJ set style and flow wise, I definitely didn’t have multiple options as far as track selection goes.
I don’t have a superlative marketing phrase to give you here, as HYPE Tour will not be reinventing the wheel, but it’ll be more of me playing great music. I’ll be present and interactive as I always am, and the dancing crowds will leave the joint sweaty and smiling!”
An exciting date in the diary for you is 29th August, when the second edition of the Sandstorm Run will take place in your home city of Helsinki, Finland. We’d love to know more about what this entails.
“The concept of the Sandstorm Run is a 7K fun run in Helsinki through some of the most memorable Sandstorm music video locations. You can run as fast as you can, or take it as chilled as you want, and you’re encouraged to dress up in the style of the music video, or anything else fun and comfortable. Anything goes really!
Building on last year’s debut run event, for 2026 we now have an outdoor park concert afterwards as well. Think about it as ‘Darude & Friends’, and in this context it means all the runners and their undoubtedly amazing costumes AND a few of my great DJ friends who are helping me not let the adrenaline and dopamine release end quite so early!”
You have one of the most instantly recognisable catalogues in dance music history. Which up and coming producers are you looking to now, and seeing great potential for future stars of the scene?
“Oh boy, that’s always the valid million dollar question, right?
I always want to plug my Finnish brothers and sisters like Orion, Rony Rex, Yotto, SØNIN, Kajis, Junkkataxi, Detmex, DJ Hapan Korppu, LUMI and Tempo Giusto. Some of them have already had great success, some are quite new.
I usually first and foremost listen to a track and automatically think if it’s something I’ll play or not. Sometimes you hear one track by someone and never anything more, so you can have a tried and tested dancefloor destroyer, but not even know who’s behind it. That’s the beauty of especially dance music, but the other side is that I really appreciate people who have longevity, be it planned and business driven, or passionate artistic stuff that eventually has to break out to the mainstream ears, too.
And hey, my Aussie brothers MNK are not newbies anymore, but I can only see them taking off higher and higher!”

Over to you Matt, from Mashd N Kutcher. Darude is one of the defining names of global dance music. What was your honest first reaction when he sent over the stems for ‘HYPE’?
“I was super excited to jump in. With this collab I didn’t find myself making creative decisions in real time or on the spot, I let the music guide me and took more of the role of the operator as such. For me, when I open a blank project and start a song from scratch these days, I’m asking myself a million questions on the fly, should it be this, could it be that, should I do this etc. With a collab like this he’d sent me over a sketch, if you will, which is a collection of ideas and sounds, so I took a bit more of a backseat and more so facilitated the songwriting itself, if that makes sense, and let my personality and lived experiences collide with his to get what you hear now as the final track.”
The rap topline that you introduced adds a very different personality to the record. Did you approach it more like writing for a club anthem or a live crowd interaction moment?
“To be honest, the vocal came last. I approached the collab from the start as only being an instrumental record. I think mostly because I’ve always personally admired that attribute about Sandstorm from Darude. Such a powerful record, and one that has resonated with people for many decades, and for it to not have a vocal or a lyric is really special. It’s solely reliant on the music to connect with people, which it does. So from the start I’d had that in mind as a goal with the record, to see if it was possible to create something awesome together as an instrumental. That being said, once the idea had taken shape, it was actually just getting me “HYPE” haha! It was as simple as that. Whilst I was working on things and the track was looping, I just found myself saying “HYPE” every two bars, and as most writers will attest to, if something is happening in your head when you’re writing a song for long enough, you end up putting it in the track. So I recorded the vocal with voice notes, pitched it down for some Method Man flavour, and here we are.”
The track is clearly engineered for festival finales and big crowd moments. When you are producing, do you literally visualise how people will react in real time?
“Honestly no, it’s a very in the moment process for me where I’m solely thinking about the song itself and making the best piece of music that I can at the time. What crowds or environments or people do with it after that is totally a different story. I guess I just trust the process and hope they like it!”
Australia has produced a huge number of globally successful dance acts in recent years. Why do you think that scene keeps creating artists with crossover appeal?
“There’s probably a mixed bag of reasons for this. I think part of it comes down to Aussies, culturally and personality wise, brewing a bit of a perfect storm for an electronic artist these days. We’re fun, loose, loud people who experience a taste of different cultures from other countries in our daily lives through people, music, movies etc here in Australia, and the curious amongst us seek out more of that as we explore the wider world. I guess the top percentage of creatives in electronic music who really grind it out to make it to the top from here exhibit all those features, and it stands out amongst the crowd when we’re overseas? I don’t know, it’s a theory.”
What are you most excited for in the second half of 2026?
“More music, more shows, more collaborating and enjoying the ride. Bring it on.”
Darude x Mashd N Kutcher ‘HYPE’ is out now on Vibing Out. Listen here.
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?
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