Deepology Special returns with long-awaited Electric and Jozhy K collaboration, Everybody
Electric and Jozhy K finally meet on Everybody, a vinyl-only Deepology Special 12-inch built for DJ sets, collector shelves, and no-stream scarcity.

After years of anticipation inside Deepology’s Moscow orbit, Electric and Jozhy K finally joined forces on Everybody, a DS008V Deepology Special 12-inch that feels less like a routine single and more like a label milestone. The original mix arrives with three remixes from Andrei Sleaga, Farid Odilbekov with Mikhail Kobzar, and Khalil Belamallem, giving the record the kind of spread that lets one idea travel across multiple corners of the underground.
That matters in minimal techno because the format still carries social weight. Everybody was issued exclusively on Bandcamp and on-demand vinyl, with no stream, and the UK-manufactured pressing from elasticStage was priced at US$31.90 with an estimated dispatch date of May 8, 2026. In a scene where a record can still signal taste, access, and intent all at once, vinyl-only is not just packaging. It is a statement that the music belongs in the booth, on a shelf, and in the small network of people who chase limited physical copies before they disappear into private collections.
Deepology’s own framing makes the aesthetic clear: atmospheric textures, hypnotic grooves, and pure analog warmth. The four tracks, running 8:22, 6:36, 7:10, and 7:52, are built for long-form mixing rather than quick consumption, which is exactly why this release lands with DJs who still value records that breathe. The full-cover artwork, credited to Alexander Dovnar, and mastering by DJ Linus reinforce the sense that this was assembled as a complete object, not a digital afterthought.
The collaboration also carries real lineage. Deepology says it was founded in 2007 by Electric and One, also known as Fragmented Beats, and the label’s Bandcamp catalog now lists 147 releases. Electric’s Resident Advisor biography places him in Moscow’s electronic scene since 1998 and identifies him as co-host of In Love with Deepology, which makes Everybody feel like a continuation of a long-running conversation rather than a first meeting. Jozhy K’s musical career dates back to 2003, while the remix roster widens the record’s geography through Andrey Djackonda’s Moldovan Conceptual Records base and Khalil Belamallem’s path from Rabat, Morocco, into professional DJing since 2001.
The result is a release that sits right where Deepology has always been strongest, between regional identity and wider club utility. Deepology previously made the same point with its Four Seasons vinyl-only series, which paired artists from Russia, Ukraine, Germany, and Finland across seasonal installments. Everybody carries that same instinct forward: scarce, tactile, and clearly made for the part of the scene that still treats a 12-inch as both tool and trophy.
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