All These Girls Chart – Kalima: A Selection That Maps the Pulse of the Current Underground
Kalima presents his All These Girls Chart, a ten-track compilation that operates as a sonic map of the contemporary underground. Far from a generic playlist, this selection reveals the refined taste of an artist who moves effortlessly between melodic house, roots-deep house, and the darker territories of emotionally driven techno.
The chart opens with its namesake, All These Girls (Extended Mix), co-produced with Valentti for EXE AUDIO. At 128 BPM in Gb Major, the track sets the tone with an intense melodic construction and rhythmic architecture that balances energy with introspection — a hallmark of the new generation of melodic house & techno.
The selection deepens with Wanna See, Kalima's own cut on All Day I Dream, Lee Burridge's label and an absolute benchmark of organic deep house. At 123 BPM in Bb Minor, it is the most cinematic piece in the chart and confirms the producer's versatility.
- Frequency – Butch (Permanent Vacation): Impeccably crafted deep house, 123 BPM in Db Major. Butch at his most elegant.
- No Wheelbacks – Matt & Juan Brizuela (EXE AUDIO): 129 BPM, D Major. Percussive groove and evolved synthesis within melodic techno territory.
- Dusty Disco – Anthony Cole (JEAHMON! Records): 126 BPM, C Minor. Sophisticated indie dance with retro texture and contemporary drive.
- Drop It – Knorst (Not Too Fancy): 129 BPM, B Minor. The chart's sole mainstage cut, adding contrast and broadening its range.
- You Know – Kör (ofc) (Kormusik): 130 BPM, Gb Major. Direct and effective tech house, the highest energy peak in the selection.
- Get Down – Sambo (Cecille): 128 BPM, Gb Major. Classic house with a full-bodied groove and distinctive personality.
- Elevate – Joseph Abruzzi (AXEPT): 125 BPM, A Major. Melodic house & techno with an ascending emotional charge.
- Broken Heart – Yost Koen & Kristina Sheli (Sanctuary Music): 123 BPM, E Minor. An introspective closer featuring a female vocal and enveloping production.
The chart traces a coherent narrative: it opens with melodic tension, moves through functional dancefloor territory, and closes with emotional depth. A selection that confirms why Kalima is cementing himself as both an editorial and artistic voice in today's scene.