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In conversation with Kris Kurrency

  • 6 hours ago
  • 2 min read
Kris Kurrency

Kris Kurrency is a tech house electronic producer blending hypnotic grooves, seductive vocals, and explosive drops designed to ignite dance floors and festival stages alike. His sound fuses the infectious energy of modern tech house with darker, high-intensity moments, creating a flow that grips listeners from start to finish. Approaching production like a live set, every track is crafted to build tension, unleash energy, and keep the crowd fully immersed, turning each performance into a captivating, unforgettable experience.




"Bring it Back" hits straight away—what was the starting point for this track?


Bring It Back’ started with the drop idea first. I wanted something that hits immediately but still has a groove people can ride to. I built the track around a driving bassline and an acid-leaning lead, then worked backwards to shape the energy so it feels like it grabs you right away but keeps building.





There’s this mix of groove and darker energy in your sound—how did you shape that balance on this one?


I try to keep that balance by letting the groove come from the drums and bass, and using the darker energy more in the sound design. On ‘Bring It Back,’ the low end is really driving and rhythmic, while the acid-style lead and textures bring that edge. It’s about making it hit hard without losing the bounce.



When you were working on it, were you already picturing a specific moment on the dancefloor where it would land?


Yeah, I was picturing that moment where the energy’s already up and you drop something that takes it a level higher. Not necessarily peak peak, but that point where people are fully locked in and ready for something with a little more edge





The vocal really sticks—what made you choose that hook, and how do you usually work with vocals?


I chose it because it’s the kind of hook people remember after one listen. In a club, that matters. I usually keep vocals tight and purposeful—just enough to create a moment, then let the track do the rest.



After this release, do you feel like your sound is shifting in any direction, or are you doubling down on what you’ve built so far?


It’s more of an evolution. I’m refining what I’ve been building, but also starting to open it up a bit. I’ve been working on some upcoming music that’s more vocal-heavy and a bit more layered production-wise, so you’ll start to hear that direction come through.





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