Mellizos land on Andhera Records with tripped-out late-night cut
Mellizos’ Bite This lands on Andhera with tripped-out, peak-time restraint and a groove shape minimal heads will clock immediately.

Mellizos landed on Andhera Records with Bite This, a tripped-out late-night cut that pushes hard enough for peak-time dancefloors while keeping its details tightly clipped. The record sits just outside pure minimal techno, leaning instead into modern minimal influences inside a house framework, but its punchy hypnotic groove, subtle spoken-word vocals, powerful drums, rolling low-end pressure, trippy lead elements and crisp percussion give it the kind of locked-in feel minimal heads recognize fast.
That fit matters because Andhera has built its identity around club function and underground credibility. The Brooklyn-based label, founded in 2020, had already reached 50 releases by April 2025, and its catalog sits mainly in Minimal / Deep Tech, Tech House, House and Deep House. Beatportal has also framed Andhera as rooted in Brooklyn’s underground scene, which makes Bite This feel less like a stray crossover and more like a record arriving in the right room.

Mellizos bring a profile that matches that lane. The Texas-based twin DJ and producer duo signed their first record deal at 15, and their momentum has carried through support from Marco Carola, Franky Rizardo, The Martinez Brothers, PAWSA and Mr. Belt & Wezol. Beatport describes their sound as deep, percussive house grooves with a modern, minimal twist, while Apple Music lists their hometown as Houston, Texas, United States. Their music has already traveled through Destino Ibiza, Awakenings Festival and Love Family Park, and they logged a first sold-out PM Radio event in New York City.
The rollout suggests Bite This is part of a broader push, not a one-off placement. June dates were confirmed at Cova Santa Ibiza, Boothstock Festival Rotterdam and Colorado Charlies in the Netherlands, while additional releases were already lined up on Nervous Records, Factory 93 / Insomniac, LTF and Elrow. That kind of pipeline usually belongs to artists who know how to make a record work in a set, not just on a playlist.
For minimal techno listeners deciding whether this belongs in the crate, the answer comes down to function. Bite This is not a strict purist statement, but its restraint, low-end control and DJ-set utility put it squarely in the conversation. It is the sort of tripped-out, late-night cut that can slide across house and minimal rooms without losing its nerve.
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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