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Nima Gorji makes long-awaited Cadenza debut with It’s True

Nima Gorji finally landed on Cadenza with a single-track debut built on a hypnotic, floor-ready groove. It’s True gives the label a compact but weighty statement.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Nima Gorji makes long-awaited Cadenza debut with It’s True
Source: f4.bcbits.com

Nima Gorji finally landed on Cadenza with It’s True, a June 12, 2026 release catalogued as CADENZA138 and framed as a long-awaited debut on the Swiss imprint. That context matters: Cadenza, founded in 2003 by Luciano and Quenum, built its name on minimal techno and house with an organic, improvised feel, so bringing in an artist with Gorji’s history felt less like a routine signing than a careful fit.

It’s True arrives as a single-track release, and that stripped-down format suits the record’s intent. The track is described as rhythmic, groovy and delectably moving, with a hypnotic melody tucked beneath blended basslines. In club terms, it reads like a compact pressure system: spacious enough to breathe, but locked tight enough to keep the room moving without ever giving up its centre.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That economy carries extra weight because Gorji is not coming in as a newcomer. Resident Advisor describes him as Iranian-born, Danish-native and now based in Spain, with a career that spans more than 25 years. Beatport notes residencies at What’s Up on the terrace at Space Ibiza, Ibiza Underground, Monza and Next Wave, while NG TRAX has served as one of his key creative outlets. Taken together, the profile explains why this Cadenza debut feels like a late-career alignment between an established underground operator and a label with the same kind of deep, floor-first instincts.

The release also follows Gorji’s Cadenza Radio 023 appearance in 2025, where he dedicated the show to people in Iran fighting for freedom. That detail adds a human edge to a rollout that is otherwise all business: one track, one label debut, one clear idea. For a scene that often rewards overbuilt packages, It’s True leans the other way, trusting motion, texture and restraint to do the heavy lifting.

That is what gives the record its pull. It does not try to announce itself with scale. It simply steps into Cadenza’s lineage and, with one tightly wound groove, makes the case that Nima Gorji’s long-awaited debut was worth the wait.

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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