Jorge Mattos gains momentum as Sweet EP climbs Minimal Deep Tech charts
Jorge Mattos's Sweet EP landed on Pitch Records with support from Rossi, Archie Hamilton and Traumer, pushing the Brazilian producer into Beatport's Minimal / Deep Tech lane.

Jorge Mattos arrived on Pitch Records with more than a fresh upload. Sweet EP landed on April 17, 2026, as a four-track statement that Beatportal says is already drawing support from Rossi, Archie Hamilton, Traumer and others while moving across Beatport’s Minimal / Deep Tech charts. For a Brazilian producer trying to break deeper into the selector circuit, that mix of label backing, chart momentum and named DJ support is the kind of signal that turns a good release into a scene event.
Beatport lists the package as PTC039, priced at $8.99, and tags it HYPE in the Minimal / Deep Tech category. The tracklist is tight: “Sweet,” “Get On,” “Sensations” and “Vision.” Another listing puts the record in the 126 to 130 BPM range, which helps explain why it reads as functional club material rather than just another streaming-era four-tracker. The groove language matters here. The appeal is in restraint, in streamlined arrangements that leave room for a mixer, a transition and a room full of people who want the low-end to do the talking.
That’s also why the Pitch Records move feels like a credibility play. Mattos is not arriving cold. Earlier coverage places him in São Paulo and says he has been active in the electronic scene since at least 2018. Beatport entries show a steady build before Sweet EP, including Section EP on TBX Limited on February 23, 2024, Fresh EP on MAISON Label on August 30, 2024, Weather Lake on Namata and DaHauz on MAISON Label. Sweet EP fits into that run as the moment where the discography starts to look less local and more export-ready.

The support list sharpens that picture. Rossi, Archie Hamilton and Traumer are the kind of names that matter in minimal and deep-tech because their endorsement travels through playlists, promos and booth-to-booth conversation. That is how records leave the promo pile and become tools. At a time when Beatport chart visibility still helps define which cuts get repeated in club sets, Mattos now has a release that works both as a calling card and as a usable DJ record. Pitch Records gets a rising Brazilian name; the scene gets a four-track EP built for movement, not just attention.
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