Benzza’s ANNKASH EP delivers focused, hypnotic minimal techno on Circuit Techno
Benzza’s ANNKASH strips minimal techno down to groove, repetition, and tension, while Circuit Techno turns the EP into a sharp statement of Cali club identity.

Benzza arrives with discipline, not noise
Benzza’s ANNKASH EP lands as a clear statement of intent: minimal techno built on process, not spectacle. Circuit Techno presents it as Benzza’s arrival on the label, and that framing matters because the record is designed around groove, repetition, and the small shifts that make a track feel alive over time. In a scene where so many releases blur together on first pass, ANNKASH stands out by making its construction the point.

That focus gives the EP real practical value. The music is positioned for both the dancefloor and deeper listening, which is exactly where strong minimal techno tends to earn its keep: functional enough to move a room, textured enough to reward close attention. For a release dropping into a space where 97 percent of readers only look and move on, and just 23.8 percent of stories get shared, that kind of precision is the kind of detail people remember.
How the record is built
The release stays tight with five tracks: ZAza, ARIGATO, ANNKASH, KENAY, and ZAza, in a Krubim remix. That compact structure is part of the appeal, because nothing here feels padded out or overworked. Instead, the EP leans into clean arrangements, tribal percussion, dark vocals, and variations that keep mutating just enough to hold tension without breaking the spell.
That is the core of its minimalist groove science. The record does not chase dramatic drops or melodic overload; it creates pressure through repetition and subtle detail, then keeps that pressure moving. Benzza’s approach feels deliberately controlled, with motion coming from tiny internal changes rather than obvious contrast, which is why the EP reads as a strong pure-minimal statement rather than a generic techno set of tools.
Why the sound works on a dancefloor and beyond
The dual-purpose framing is one of the smartest things about ANNKASH. On a crowded club night, the clean structure and steady pulse give a DJ something reliable to work with, while the tribal percussion and dark vocal elements add enough character to cut through a dense set. At the same time, the evolving details keep the EP interesting in headphones, where the little shifts in tension become easier to hear.
That balance is where minimal techno usually becomes more than reduction for its own sake. Benzza’s record uses restraint as a compositional tool, letting the groove do the heavy lifting while the arrangement gradually opens and closes space. The result is hypnotic rather than blunt, and that distinction matters in a community that values records capable of moving between peak-time function and more focused listening.
What the Krubim remix adds
The Krubim remix of ZAza gives the EP a second angle without breaking its identity. Circuit Techno positions it as the more conceptual and direct club interpretation, which makes the release feel like a two-sided object rather than a one-note debut. Benzza’s original approach leans into motion and detail, while Krubim’s version sharpens the club utility.
That pairing works because Krubim is not an outside name dropped in for decoration. Resident Advisor identifies Krubim as the artistic project of Angel Florian, based in Cali, Colombia, with a birthplace in Venezuela and label links to Refluxed Records and Circuit Techno. RA also shows his first event on the platform in 2025, plus a 2026 appearance in Cali and another in Roldanillo, which places him firmly inside the current regional circuit rather than at a remove from it.
Circuit Techno gives the EP a local mission
Circuit Techno’s role in this release is bigger than a standard label credit. The imprint says it is a techno label and collective based in Cali, Colombia, founded on September 29, 2022, and that it promotes local and national artists through digital distribution. It also says it is drawn to techno, groove, and minimal techno, which makes ANNKASH feel like a natural fit for the label’s identity rather than an isolated booking decision.
The catalog history reinforces that point. Before Benzza’s EP, Circuit Techno’s Bandcamp catalog included CTEP001 Todo Pasa by PØSS, CT003 Inverted Space by DavidXGarcía, CT002 On The Chord by Left (CO), and CT001 Castigo by FORTEM, with Cathie V also appearing in the broader roster. That sequence shows a curatorial line already taking shape in Cali, one that favors stripped-down dance music with enough character to feel regional without becoming local-only.
Why Colombia matters in this conversation
ANKKASH also lands inside a wider Colombian techno story that has been building for years. Resident Advisor described Colombia’s techno scene in 2018 as world-class, with especially active club and festival energy in Bogotá and Medellín. That context helps explain why a release like this matters now: it is not just a label debut, but part of a broader ecosystem where Colombian artists are refining their own version of groove-driven minimal techno.
Benzza’s own profile keeps the focus on the music. Bandcamp describes Benzza as a Colombia-based electronic DJ and producer working in techno, which fits the EP’s spare presentation and lets the release speak for itself. Rather than foregrounding biography or hype, ANNKASH uses structure, tone, and repetition to establish identity, which is often the most convincing way a new artist earns attention in this corner of the scene.
Release details that matter
The practical information is clean and easy to track. ANNKASH was released on May 8, 2026, and Beatport lists it on Circuit Techno under catalog CTEP02, while other listings show CTEP002. Bandcamp, SoundCloud, and Juno Download all confirm the five-track format and the label attribution, so the release is consistent across the main platforms where DJs and collectors are likely to find it.
That consistency matters because it underlines the record’s purpose. Benzza is not trying to overwhelm the listener with excess; the EP is built to be precise, playable, and memorable through detail. On Circuit Techno, that makes ANNKASH feel like more than a debut. It is a clear example of how minimal techno can still hit hardest when every choice, from the percussion to the remix, serves the same tight, hypnotic design.
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