ECOUL SND releases UnRMXD#10 featuring GHRS and Tamburrano
ECOUL SND released UnRMXD#10, a two-track set with a GHRS original and a Francesco Tamburrano remix that brings dub textures into minimal late-night sets.

ECOUL SND quietly cut a focused two-track release on January 12, 2026, with UnRMXD#10 bringing GHRS’s original into conversation with a Francesco Tamburrano reinterpretation. The package leans into textured dub layers, restrained minimalism and a hypnotic rhythmic flow, with tags that sit between minimal house, microhouse and dub techno.
The GHRS original presents the kind of pared-back architecture that works as the backbone of late-night sets. Its sparse elements and steady pulse offer selectors a canvas for gradual manipulation and long-form mixing. Producers who work in microhouse territory will find the emphasis on subtle shifts and texture useful when sculpting pockets of atmosphere without overwhelming a DJ mix.
Tamburrano’s remix reframes the material, showing how a single minimal arrangement can be nudged into different emotional terrain. The reinterpretation points to the practical value of remix culture in minimal scenes: small changes in delay, reverb and low-end handling open fresh mixing options and extend a record’s usefulness across set contexts. For selectors focused on dub-leaning techno, the pair provides both a reliable DJ tool and a study in how restraint and texture trade places to keep grooves interesting.
Practically, these tracks slot well into the 1am-to-dawn window where space and repetition matter more than bombast. DJs can use the GHRS cut as a foundation for layering percussive loops or acidic accents while keeping the mix breathable, then flip to Tamburrano’s version to add dub weight and movement without radically changing energy. Producers can sample the release’s dub treatments to learn how sparse elements build tension: long delay tails, subtle modulation and careful low-mid carving all push a minimal idea forward without crowding the mix.

Contextually, UnRMXD#10 underscores an ongoing thread in minimal techno communities: the value of texture over density. As microhouse and dub techno continue to intersect, releases like this give selectors immediate tools and give producers a reminder that small edits and textural FX can refresh an arrangement as effectively as a full overhaul.
For DJs, the takeaway is simple—slot these cuts where space and vibe matter, not volume. For producers, listen for the micro-moves: they’re the ones you can borrow or adapt to keep your tracks playable in long DJ sequences. Expect both versions to show up in sets where delay, dub, and restraint are the order of the night.
Sources:
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

