HYPERSPACE: Best Discoveries of the Week – Episode 167
Hey Space Travellers,
Are we ready for another incredible episode of Hyperspace?
Episode 167 landed, fasten your seatbelts and get ready to depart!
Krey Galin – “Beni Yaktin”
Krey Galin really cooked up something different with “Beni Yaktin”. The whole EP feels like a late-night cultural mashup in the best way possible: Turkish melodies, Middle Eastern textures, smooth pop instincts, multilingual vibes… somehow it all clicks like magic. And yes, it’s addictive!
This project feels extremely natural, you can tell this wasn’t made from some “industry world music checklist”.. It sounds like real experiences turned into music: hearing Turkish songs in restaurants, linking with people from different cultures, soaking in the atmosphere, then translating that energy into something personal and catchy as hell.
The production is clean and vibey throughout, balancing emotional melodies with danceable rhythms and hypnotic, let’s say addictive hooks. That “Yaktin baby Yaktin” refrain gets stuck in your brain immediately. No joke!
Imagine traveling through different emotional and cultural spaces without losing its identity.. that’s exactly how this record makes you feel: Krey Galin leans fully into the fusion, and honestly, that’s what makes the EP stand out so much. Super unique vibe for real!
Mark Wink – “Gimme Some Sugar”
Mark Wink literally said “why pick one genre when I can cook in all of them?” with his album “Gimme Some Sugar”. The whole project is wild in the best way possible, same core song flipped into different styles, but somehow every version still rocks. That’s honestly harder than it sounds. Most songs would fall apart after one remix, but this hook got crazy replay value no matter the vibe!
You can tell Mark’s got both the tech brain and the musician brain working together here. The production is super polished, clean, and incredibly solid. One minute it’s giving glossy pop energy, next it’s straight-up rock mode, then suddenly you’re on some beach-bar groove or moving like it’s a line dance in the club after too many drinks. It shouldn’t work this smoothly, but trust us, it does.
This wonderful project doesn’t take itself too seriously, but the craftsmanship is real. Catchy as hell, fun, genius.. pure sugar rush energy front to back!
Shweta Harve – “Have You Loved Like a Tree?”
You know, not every love song needs to scream to leave an impact, and “Have You Loved Like a Tree?” understands that perfectly. Shweta Harve dives into stillness here, crafting something reflective, grounded, and honestly kind of refreshing in a world full of disposable “situationship” anthems and algorithm-chasing hooks.
The song moves with patience, both lyrically and sonically. The acustic production choices give the track this warm and meditative atmosphere that lets the message land naturally, and focuses on emotional consistency, like love as protection, presence, and endurance. The whole tree metaphor could’ve easily felt too on-the-nose, but Shweta sells it with sincerity here.
Her vocal delivery is quite intimate the entire time, never overdoing the emotion, which somehow makes the track even more unique. It feels personal without becoming overly heavy. A quiet wisdom runs through the songwriting that definitely sticks with you after the song ends.
Real late-night reflection music. Gentle, thoughtful, and, let’s say that, healing.
Stefanie Michaela – “LET ME SEE THE REAL YOU”
Stefanie Michaela brings us her latest single, “Let Me See the Real You”, a track that pulls up with bright synths, smooth pop/R&B energy, and a super catchy bounce that instantly feels good, keeping emotions underneath ready to shine. It’s not just another cookie-cutter empowerment song pretending to be deep for aesthetics, this one’s got actual soul.
Her vocals are warm, confident, emotional, and incredibly catchy: she knows exactly how to ride the beat and make the hook stick in your head for hours! The production is super clean too, polished to perfection, but still human.
This song definitely has a drop that hits hard, but also its message. It’s about dropping the fake version of yourself and letting people see who you really are.. You can tell she’s speaking from actual experience here.
We can easily say that this single is uplifting, smooth, and ridiculously replayable. One of those songs that feels light on the surface but actually sticks with you after it ends.
Milyam – “Intimacy”
Some tracks try way too hard to sound “luxury” and end up feeling empty, but “Intimacy” does the opposite. Milyam keeps everything minimal, smooth, and controlled, but there are proper emotions sitting underneath all the late-night aesthetics. The vibe is incredibly immersive from the moment you hit play.
The production is extremely solid: soft synth textures, slow-burning rhythms, glossy atmosphere everywhere, just brilliant, we’d say. It breathes. Every sound has space to land, making this song feel super intimate, almost like you accidentally walked into somebody’s private thoughts in the middle of the night.
MILYAM’s voice is the real hook here. It’s airy, seductive, emotional. She doesn’t oversing or force drama; she just glides through the track with this calm confidence, and that’s why this track has loads of charm.
What’s cool is also how the song balances sensuality with actual depth. It’s not just “vibes music.” There’s longing, obsession, vulnerability, all wrapped inside this polished atmospheric R&B sound that feels modern without sounding disposable.
Echo Circuit Society – “Misplaced Tomorrow”
“Misplaced Tomorrow” is exactly the kind of track that feels designed to set on fire the dancefloor. This incredible single from Echo Circuit Society will get stuck in your head as soon as you hear those catchy chords!
The Manchester collective blends melodic house, soul, and atmospheric electronics into something that feels nostalgic but fresh, and that’s a combo that works extremely well in this tune. The production is smooth as hell, but never cold. Warm keys and bright guitars, punchy drums and floating vocals: all crash together in a way that feels soothing without losing the groove.
The track is carried by its mood. There’s this weird emotional tension running through it, like you’re dancing while simultaneously overthinking your entire life. The beat keeps moving, but there’s still this rainy-night loneliness waiting around the corner.#
The vocals are smooth, and when the drops land, they genuinely slap. Not in an aggressive festival way, but more like that sudden dopamine rush when a tune completely takes over your headphones.
Echo Circuit Society are definitely building atmosphere, memories, and vibes you actually wanna sit inside for a while.
C’batch – “The Vault 1 (C’batch Smooth / Rough)”
In our previous episodes, we’ve seen C’batch dropping some serious stuff, and this time, he’s back with his complete project called “The Vault 1 (C’batch Smooth / Rough)”. This phenomenal album is like opening a hidden archive packed with soul, memory, and pure musical finesse. This record definitely doesn’t sound dusty or trapped in the past; the album breathes with fresh energy, blending smooth jazz, ambient soul, addictive grooves, and some R&B touch into something seriously classy. The whole project moves with confidence, letting atmosphere, groove, and emotion slowly wash over you.
There’s a grown-man elegance all over this thing. You can hear decades of experience in the way the arrangements are made. Even when the album gets minimal, it still feels full. That’s real craftsmanship. The craziest part is how immersive it becomes after a while. You stop listening track by track and just fall into its vibes completely.
This album doesn’t walk into the room trying to flex.. it just sits down in a leather chair, pours itself a drink, and lets the vibe do all the talking. Incredible project that goes through reflection, romance, spirituality, and nostalgia with effortless cool. Ridiculously well-crafted project, this is a must-listen.
m0n0 jay – “L.L.L. (ATH remix)”
m0n0 jay is here with her single “L.L.L.” remixed by ATH, allowing us to have a blast tonight. This thing doesn’t just remix the original; it literally tears it apart, throws it into a sweaty underground warehouse at 3AM, and lets the bass do psychological damage! ATH went full menace mode on the production, turning the track into a brutal industrial techno bomb packed with a solid groove, metallic textures, and pure basement-rave chaos.
The contrast here is incredible: m0n0 jay’s airy vocals float over the beat like some glitter-covered cyber angel losing her mind mid-set. It’s sexy, aggressive, and seriously hypnotic.
The bright pop energy from the original gets dragged into something darker, sweatier, and way more feral. There’s nothing mainstream here; this is built for strobe lights, blown speakers, and being on the razzle.
Honestly? This remix slaps. Slaps hard.
Nils Lassen – “Under Your Spell”
“Under Your Spell” is the kind of track that doesn’t play to impress; it seduces you into noticing it later.
At first it feels almost casual, like it’s playing it cool on purpose. Soft synths, loose grooves, nothing “attention seeker”. But that’s the trick: it’s not background music, it’s slow capture. The more you listen, the more it starts to feel like your headspace is syncing to it rather than the other way around.
Nils Lassen has that rare control where he never overplays emotion; instead, he suggests it. Everything is placed with this calm precision, like someone speaking quietly in a room knowing you’ll lean in anyway. The guitars, the textures, even the silence between elements all feel intentional but never stiff.
And emotionally it’s not sad or dark.. it’s lucid. That weird in-between state where desire and uncertainty aren’t problems to solve, just conditions you’re temporarily living inside.
It’s not a track that hits you. It’s one that subtly changes your pace without asking permission.. and by the time you notice, you’re already inside it.
Primal Dreams – “Where wild boys roam”
Primal Dreams leans all the way into that soft-focus, end-of-summer glow with his single “Where wild boys roam”, the kind where everything feels slightly golden, slightly fading, but in a way that somehow makes it more alive.
A gentle groove runs throughout the song, like a calm heartbeat rhythm that keeps everything floating. The guitars feel sun-warmed, almost feather-light, like they’ve been played for years on porches that don’t exist anymore. And the vocals sit right in that sweet spot, vulnerable but steady, like someone remembering something important without trying to grab it back.
It’s giving that early Ed Sheeran intimacy, but filtered through Scandinavian air: more space, more silence between the notes, more nature in the sound itself. You can practically hear the trees in it.
This song will hit you with its emotional balance. It’s nostalgic and uplifting at the same time, like a smile you give something you’ve already let go of. Soft, simple, beautiful.. and it stays with you longer than it needs to.
