Kamrran’s Linea Gialla Beatport chart spotlights Minimal and Deep Tech buys
Kamrran’s April 9 Linea Gialla chart placed Deep Tech and Minimal beside house and melodic cuts, showing how wide the buying lane has become.

Kamrran’s Linea Gialla chart landed as a clean snapshot of where Minimal and Deep Tech now sit inside Beatport’s wider dance-floor ecosystem. The April 9 chart was filed under House, Tech House, Deep House, Minimal / Deep Tech, and Melodic House & Techno, putting minimal-leaning records in the same buying lane as much broader club selections.
That matters because Beatport charts are not just listening lists. They are built for DJs and buyers, can be published immediately, and are designed to move through social channels with a shareable chart URL. Beatport also says its Global Top 100 and Genre Top 100 charts update every day based on sales, while chart and editorial placements remain curated decisions. For selectors tracking what is actually getting bought, that makes a chart like Linea Gialla more than a playlist. It is a small market read.

Kamrran’s own profile helps explain the blend. Beatport describes him as a DJ and producer based in Baku, Azerbaijan, with a sound shaped by Detroit and Chicago and by 1980s and 1990s synths and drum machines. That lineage shows up in the chart’s balance of sturdy house pressure and more stripped-back, functional tools. The lineup includes Rish Huss and Kamrran’s “Linea Gialla (Extended Version),” a Chris Di Perri remix, Franky Rizardo’s “Shinjuku (Extended Mix),” and Nic Fanciulli’s “Revolution” in extended form, alongside other club-ready cuts.
The release itself gives the clearest clue to how Beatport is reading the record. The Linea Gialla release page lists a March 20, 2026 release date and catalog number MHD267 on Moon Harbour Recordings, with credit to Rish Huss, Kamrran, and Chris Di Perri. Moon Harbour has long framed itself as a bastion of deep and tech house quality since the turn of the millennium, and it says its sound evolved from deep house toward minimal and tech house over time. On its own copy for the track, the label tags Linea Gialla as Deep Tech / Minimal.
That combination explains why the chart feels coherent even without being a pure minimal techno document. Beatport’s dedicated Minimal / Deep Tech genre hub and Top 100 confirm that the platform sees the lane as distinct, but charts like this show how often that lane now overlaps with house, tech house, and melodic material. For minimal-minded DJs, the takeaway is plain: the crossover is real, and Beatport is giving it visible shelf space.
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