Yushh returns with Full Body AXY, a low-end Timedance reset
Yushh’s first solo EP in three years lands as a five-track Timedance reset, built for low-end pressure and tight club function.

Yushh is back in the Bristol-Timedance lane with Full Body AXY, a five-track EP that arrives on 12 June 2026 and marks her first solo outing in three years. It is the kind of return that matters in this corner of techno: not a flood of material, but a controlled reset, where tension and subs weight do more work than obvious flourish.
The fit with Timedance feels deliberate. The Bristol label, founded by Batu, has built its identity around left-of-centre club music with a strong sound-system bias, and its roster already maps a wide field of producers including Air Max ’97, Bruce, Daisy Moon, Giant Swan, Cleyra, Hodge, Jabes, Laksa, Lurka, Metrist, Ploy, re:ni, Verraco, Yaleesa Hall, Pearson Sound and Polygonia. Yushh’s place in that circle reads less like a guest spot than a natural next step for an artist whose music has travelled from Bristol out onto dancefloors well beyond the city.
That trajectory matters because Full Body AXY is being framed around precision. The tracklist is Petty Vengeance, The OCC, Full Body AXY, Mos Def and To Be Misled, a sequence that looks built for pressure, spacing and accumulation rather than scale. For minimal-techno listeners, that shape is the point. Five tracks is enough room for a proper statement, but not so much that the edges blur. The release seems designed to reward close listening while still carrying the physical weight needed in a club.
The format reinforces that approach. Bandcamp lists the vinyl edition as a 12-inch EP on 140g vinyl, mastered by Beau Thomas and housed in a black sleeve with sticker artwork by Leeza Pritychenko. Those details give the record a tactile, no-waste feel that matches the music’s low-end focus. This is not Yushh reaching for a bigger, broader reset by volume. It is a narrower one, and that makes it sharper.
For a Bristol artist whose glistening, shape-shifting sound has already been moving through global dancefloors, Full Body AXY arrives at exactly the right moment. It places Yushh inside one of the UK’s most credible club ecosystems while keeping the music rooted in the reduced, physical language that gives minimal-techno its pull, and that is what makes the EP feel like a real turning point rather than just another label date.
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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