ABO Delivers Groovy Two-Track Drift EP via Colombia's Psicodelica Label
ABO's Drift EP lands on Colombia's Psicodelica with two groove-forward cuts for the deeper end of the minimal dancefloor.

ABO's Drift EP dropped on Colombian imprint Psicodelica on April 3, stacking two tracks at the restrained, groove-led end of the minimal dancefloor spectrum. Compact and DJ-focused, the release slots neatly into the growing body of Latin American underground material circulating through global Bandcamp networks.
The title track "Drift," the EP's leading cut, earns its sunrise deep house classification. Bass weight is present but unhurried, sitting low in the mix without reaching for chest impact; it suggests depth rather than force. Hi-hat brightness stays dialled back, keeping the upper frequencies airy and open in a way that suits long-form layering. Breakdowns give the track room to exhale, not dramatically extended, but long enough for a selector to work with. The whole construction is built for easy mixing: smooth entries and exits, no abrupt transients, the kind of arrangement that plays nicely inside a two- or three-deck setup. In groove terms, "Drift" moves like something rolling forward on a gentle slope rather than being pushed. Deploy it in the first hour, when the room still needs coaxing.
"All I Want" shifts registers without abandoning the EP's core restraint. Where "Drift" floats, this one rolls, and the funky house and hip house tags in the release copy start to earn their keep: there is a swing in the rhythmic framework that gives the track slightly more urgency. Bass weight tightens, hi-hat brightness reads a touch hotter, and the breakdown structure is trimmer, making it a better fit for mid-set deployment rather than the warm-up. Mix-friendliness remains strong; the track's internal consistency means it layers cleanly against similarly textured material in a rolling minimal programme. Think of it as the bridge piece, the cut that nudges a set from textural drift into something with a bit more forward motion. Verdict: reach for it between midnight and the point where the floor is fully committed.
Psicodelica operates at the intersection of house, deep tech and minimal techno, and the Drift EP represents the label's cross-pollination logic well. The release categories span deep house, minimal techno, funky house and the specifically regional "house Colombia" tag, signalling both local scene ownership and international accessibility. For selectors building playlists around Latin American underground output, or simply looking for well-constructed, low-fuss tools for the deeper slots, ABO's two-tracker makes a practical case without overreaching.
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