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Subios Records releases Groovearth’s tight three-track minimal techno set

Subios gives Groovearth a compact three-track tool built for quick mixing, with 130-132 BPM pressure and a Viapo remix for different points in the set.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Subios Records releases Groovearth’s tight three-track minimal techno set
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Subios Records has lined up Groovearth’s Everyday as the kind of compact dark-minimal package DJs actually reach for when the room needs control, not clutter. With just three cuts and a clear arc, it fits warm-up pressure, late-night transitions, and stripped-back groove management without forcing a big swing in energy.

The release, [SUBIOS206], is built around Everyday, then Fast and Simple, then a Viapo remix of Fast and Simple. That structure matters. Everyday runs 5:36, Fast and Simple stretches to 6:27, and the Viapo remix comes in at 6:01, giving selectors three usable shapes from one idea rather than a bloated EP that overstates its case. The titles match the function too: Everyday sounds like a track designed to sit inside a mix, while Fast and Simple signals rhythm, repetition, and utility over melodic spectacle.

Subios Records placed the record squarely in its own lane. The Essen, Germany label says it was established in 2016 by TiM TASTE, Earl Grau and Werner B., rooted in the Ruhrpott area of western Germany, and built to support both established names and newcomers. TiM TASTE’s own Bandcamp profile frames him as a driving minimal techno producer and DJ, which fits the label’s direct, no-frills identity and its SUB-Cast series of dark minimal sets on SoundCloud.

The release dates show the same kind of practical, digital-first rollout. Bandcamp lists Everyday for May 12, 2026, while Beatport lists April 3, 2026, pointing to staggered platform availability. That timing sits alongside the functional language around the release itself: Beatport describes it as a straightforward track made to keep the dancefloor moving, and Electrobuzz places the three tracks in a 130-132 BPM range while calling the set dark and deliberate peak-hour techno.

For minimal techno heads, that combination is the real story. Groovearth did not try to stretch one idea across too much space, and Subios did not dress it up as anything bigger than it is. It is a tight three-tracker with enough pace, restraint, and remix utility to move from the first serious heads-down stretch of the night into the later, denser part of the session without losing its shape.

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