There’s a certain electricity humming through PRAXIS, the latest EP from Phydra on Wormhole Music Group—the kind that feels less like a release and more like a live wire dropped straight into the bloodstream. In a scene that often confuses volume for vision, Phydra comes in sharp, deliberate, and refreshingly focused.
Across the EP, he balances raw low-end force with an almost surgical attention to detail. Tracks unfold with patience before snapping into place, each drop hitting with intent rather than excess. It’s heavy, no question—but there’s control here, a sense that every distorted growl and fractured rhythm has been carefully engineered. This is music built to move bodies, but also to reward close listening.
What makes PRAXIS stand out is its confidence. Phydra isn’t chasing trends; he’s refining a sound that feels distinctly his own, rooted in the experimental ethos that Wormhole has cultivated. There’s a forward-thinking quality running through the EP, suggesting an artist who’s not just participating in the underground, but actively shaping it.
That momentum hasn’t gone unnoticed. In a recent interview with Spin, Subtronics gave Phydra a shoutout—a meaningful nod from one of bass music’s most visible figures. It’s the kind of recognition that signals real traction.
PRAXIS feels like a statement: focused, inventive, and undeniably powerful. Phydra isn’t just knocking on the door—he’s already inside, rewiring the place.
Follow Phydra:
Facebook | Instagram | SoundCloud
There’s a certain electricity humming through PRAXIS, the latest EP from Phydra on Wormhole Music Group—the kind that feels less like a release and more like a live wire dropped straight into the bloodstream. In a scene that often confuses volume for vision, Phydra comes in sharp, deliberate, and refreshingly focused.
Across the EP, he balances raw low-end force with an almost surgical attention to detail. Tracks unfold with patience before snapping into place, each drop hitting with intent rather than excess. It’s heavy, no question—but there’s control here, a sense that every distorted growl and fractured rhythm has been carefully engineered. This is music built to move bodies, but also to reward close listening.
What makes PRAXIS stand out is its confidence. Phydra isn’t chasing trends; he’s refining a sound that feels distinctly his own, rooted in the experimental ethos that Wormhole has cultivated. There’s a forward-thinking quality running through the EP, suggesting an artist who’s not just participating in the underground, but actively shaping it.
That momentum hasn’t gone unnoticed. In a recent interview with Spin, Subtronics gave Phydra a shoutout—a meaningful nod from one of bass music’s most visible figures. It’s the kind of recognition that signals real traction.
PRAXIS feels like a statement: focused, inventive, and undeniably powerful. Phydra isn’t just knocking on the door—he’s already inside, rewiring the place.
Follow Phydra:
Facebook | Instagram | SoundCloud
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