DBBD turns Club Affair into a fast-moving minimal techno club set
DBBD’s 11-track, 32-minute Club Affair lands like a compact crate of club tools, from warm-up opener Amore to peak-time cuts and a late-night closer.

DBBD’s Club Affair landed on June 26 with 11 tracks packed into roughly 32 minutes, a shape that plays less like a long-form album and more like a tight DJ bag. Bandcamp frames it as DBBD’s second album, and the sequencing backs that up: this is built for motion, not drift.
The record opens with Amore and Berlin, then moves through Paparazzi, Red Eye, Cool, Sexy, Eurodaddy and Fck This Beat before dropping into In the Rave, Gostosa, After Party and Super Model. That run gives the set a clear floor trajectory. Amore and Berlin read like warm-up pieces, the middle stretch carries the strongest peak-time promise, and the back half looks primed for after-hours pressure, where the room wants repetition, swing and a little less talk.
The collaboration list reinforces that club utility. Trick Tommy, Jonah Almost, Bejbi Motorola, James Indigo, Clementaum and Axel Wolf all appear across the album, including on tracks such as Paparazzi, Cool, Sexy, Eurodaddy, In the Rave, Gostosa and After Party. The effect is social rather than conceptual, with voices and features treated as quick-shifting textures inside a fast-moving sequence.
Bandcamp tags Club Affair with ghettotech, house, minimal techno, techno and Berlin, and that mix tells the story cleanly. DBBD is based in Berlin, Germany, and the city tag does more than decorate the release. It places the album in a scene where stripped-back grooves, functional drums and dancefloor pragmatism often sit right next to more playful, high-impact moves.
That club-first approach fits DBBD’s wider run. YouTube Music’s artist page lists Ero Pulse EP from 2024, then Tequila, Fallen Angel, Darkroom Madonna, momentum and Knight in 2025, followed by Fck This Beat and After Party in 2026. Resident Advisor shows DBBD’s first event on the platform in 2022, with 13K followers and strongest play regions in Berlin, Paris, Hamburg, Los Angeles and Dortmund/Essen, a footprint that matches the release’s cross-city club language.
Miss Bashful has said the Berlin club scene shaped the techno side of the project, while DBBD has described the visuals as there to enhance the music and not overthink it. Club Affair follows that logic closely. It moves fast, keeps the ideas short, and feels designed to stay useful from the first warm-up pass through the last minimal rinse of the night.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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