Dubvision - Home -extended Mix- Houseelectropp-... Now
The bassline arrives. It’s a squelchy, electro-tinged groove—not the distorted square wave of "Animals," but a rubbery, syncopated pulse that owes as much to Deadmau5’s analog warmth as it does to French touch filtering. The vocal chops enter: a female sample singing the word “Home” stretched and pitched across the chord progression. The tension builds via sidechain compression; the entire mix breathes, sucking air every time the kick hits.
The "ElectroPP" tag (likely a shorthand for Electro/Progressive Pop) attached to the file name hints at the hybrid nature of the track: It has the structural ambition of progressive house, the gritty synth bass of electro, and the vocal hook of a pop crossover. Where “Home (Extended Mix)” truly separates itself from the radio edit is in its six-and-a-half-minute runtime. DubVision understands that the "Extended Mix" is not merely a song with a longer intro; it is a narrative arc designed for the DJ booth. DubVision - Home -Extended Mix- houseelectropp-...
The track opens with a field-recording texture of wind and distant city traffic—an immediate sonic cue of longing. A simple, plucked piano arpeggio enters, filtered through a low-pass gate. The kick drum doesn't rush; it sits patiently beneath the mix. This isn't a club opener; this is the 3:00 AM set peak when the crowd’s feet are sore but their spirits are soaring. The bassline arrives