Latvian Producer Nei Hijack Signal Drops Atmospheric Three-Track EP "Remember"
Nei Hijack Signal's three-track "Remember" EP arrives in 24-bit on Bandcamp, the latest in a steady run from Ventspils built across five independent labels.

Ventspils doesn't surface often in conversations about European minimal techno, but Nei Hijack Signal has been making the case quietly. The Latvian producer dropped "Remember," a self-released three-track EP, today on Bandcamp, where the project operates under the simplified handle Nei. It adds to a catalog already distributed across five independent imprints: We're Going Deep, Analog Concept, Urban Connections, Abstract Rhythm, and Blind Allies. This is not a debut move or a label showcase; it is the latest installment in a pattern of steady, focused output that Bandcamp's underground techno ecosystem tends to reward.
The three-track sequence on "Remember" functions less like a sampler and more like a structured set. "The March" opens with deliberate intent: the title signals forward motion rather than arrival, which is exactly what a good opener does. In minimal techno, the first track's job is to establish a rhythmic frame and hold it, letting repetition do the work while micro-variation keeps the floor attentive. "The March" commits to that logic without hedging.
The title track, "Remember," operates as the pivot. This is bridge territory in a DJ narrative: pressure accumulates, the atmosphere thickens, and the submerged aesthetic the project's SoundCloud bio describes as "Crafting future memories encrypted in deep bass" becomes most legible. It is the track that makes the feeling persist after the runtime ends, which is what the name is doing.
"Cold Winds" closes the EP and earns its position through restraint rather than resolution. Atmospheric decay and a sense of withdrawal characterize the closer role in any well-sequenced minimal set; this is the track a selector reaches for when the floor needs to breathe rather than surge. Each of the three tracks runs roughly four to five minutes, sized for both focused headphone listening and flexible DJ insertion.
The 24-bit/48kHz download option available on the Bandcamp release page is a material detail worth noting. For selectors running high-quality playback rigs, that ceiling matters compared to what most streaming platforms offer. Nei also organized a listening-party RSVP on Bandcamp around the launch, a platform-native tactic that converts passive listeners into active supporters rather than relying on algorithmic placement or playlist pitching.
The genre tags on the release span eight categories: electronic, deep electro, deep techno, dub techno, electro, electronica, minimal techno, and techno. That breadth is less about positioning uncertainty and more about accuracy; these tags describe adjacent corners of the same atmospheric neighborhood rather than different rooms.
Nei's prior label placements add useful context. We're Going Deep in particular maintains a specific identity in the deeper end of underground electronic music, and placement there requires a demonstrable sonic consistency. The dual-track strategy of self-releasing through Bandcamp while placing work on recognized imprints is common among productive independent producers: labels expand reach, while self-releases return higher revenue per sale and keep release timing entirely in the artist's control.
Latvia's electronic infrastructure does not run on the same density as Berlin or Amsterdam. Bandcamp-first releasing from Ventspils is a pragmatic response to that geography, and the fact that Nei has built a cross-label catalog from that position says more about the quality of the output than about any scene advantage. "Remember" is three tracks, roughly fifteen minutes, and built to last longer than that.
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