Music4Aliens debuts Sabura and Dimsn with bouncy minimal-techno single
Music4Aliens used Reboot to introduce Sabura and Dimsn with a 5:07 bouncy minimal-techno cut. The Naples label backed the debut with M4S040 and club-ready 132 BPM.

Music4Aliens used Reboot to put Sabura and Dimsn straight into its catalogue, and it did it with a single-track release that felt built for the booth rather than the press release. The Naples, Italy imprint framed the record as a bouncy minimal-techno debut, and that is exactly how it landed: compact, direct, and ready to move a floor.
That matters for a label run by Giancarlo Di Chiara, because Music4Aliens has already staked out a lane that runs through minimal, psytech, peak time and underground techno. The imprint says its music has drawn support from Richie Hawtin, Amelie Lens, Dubfire and Joris Voorn at major festivals, and Reboot fits that profile by arriving as a clean introduction rather than a sprawling package. There are no remixes here, no second-guessing, just one idea presented with enough confidence to stand alone.

The details are useful for DJs. Bandcamp dated the release to June 5, 2026, while Beatport listed it as a preorder with a June 12, 2026 release date, catalog number M4S040. Beatport also tagged it as Techno (Peak Time / Driving), set it at 132 BPM and in the key of E Major, and gave it a length of 5:07. Those numbers line up with the track’s job: a tidy, high-function cut that sits between bouncy techno, underground techno and psy-techno without drifting into abstraction.
The Naples tag adds another layer of context. Music from that city has long carried a reputation for pressure, forward motion and underground weight, and Reboot leans into that expectation instead of trying to dodge it. Beatport’s own wording also marked the record as an Alien base debut for Sabura and Dimsn, which turns the single into a clear arrival point rather than a one-off upload.
For Music4Aliens, that is the point of Reboot. It is not trying to cover every corner of the catalogue; it is trying to announce two new names with a record that DJs can recognize in seconds and place in a set just as quickly. In a minimal-techno lane where too many debuts vanish into the background, this one arrives with enough bounce and enough structure to stick.
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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