- Digital
Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, Gal Kinnel
Studio 94
Kiosk ID
- Cat No: kioskid048
- Release: 2026-06-05
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, Gal Kinnel - Wood
00:06:12 -
2. Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, Gal Kinnel - Read My Lips
00:04:31 -
3. Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, Gal Kinnel - Studio 94
00:06:09 -
4. Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, Gal Kinnel - Big Dreams
00:05:01
16bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
For no. 48, Kiosk ID welcomes back Tel Aviv producer, DJ, and Frau Blau co-head Omri Guetta alongside frequent collaborators Omer Bar and Gal Kinnel. Fresh off a string of EPs with a stripped, kinetic vision that shows off both Guetta's finely tuned curatorial ear and Bar's background as a drummer, 'Studio 94' is the culmination of their work to date: a sharply defined dancefloor statement that folds stripped House grooves with tribal undercurrents and artfully arranged synth work into four rolling, sexy, warehouse-ready cuts.
'Wood' opens with a body-moving groove stripped to its pulsing core, with a shuddering but tasteful bassline revolving around a mesmeric pad. Lush, cerebral chords inject a sense of weightlessness into the track's kinetic drive, while choppy snare rolls open up bursts of biting edge that cut across the rolling groove structure. Spoken word lyrics turn Wood séance-like, drawing the listener into the weightless journey the track conjures.
'Read My Lips' channels the trio's percussive style into a vibrant, high-energy roller. Harder, punchier drum tones, ravey synth salvoes, and constantly cycling tribal undercurrents deliver a drum-forward dance track with spaced-out chord chops that nudge its percussive energy into warehouse territory.
The title track, 'Studio 94', carries a dual meaning: a tribute to the physical space where the music was born-a creative sanctuary at 94 Allenby Street, in the heart of Tel Aviv's raw urban energy-and a nod to the legendary Studio 54, bridging the golden era of club culture with the hardware-driven sound of today's underground. The track itself shows the trio at their most cerebral. A psychedelic, hovering bass tone anchors a beautifully subdued rhythmic architecture, with cavernous vocal chops and cascading cowbell salvoes orbiting the track's spaced-out core. Punchy yet floating, it teases a poppy anthemic hook without ever quite resolving it-the EP's most beguiling and hypnotic track.
'Big Dreams' closes on a darker, more volatile note. Across a stripped, rolling groove with subtle Dembow undertones, Big Dreams folds darkly oscillating alien synthscapes into the trio's stripped elegance. Reassembling their synth work into pulsing sample chops, Big Dreams delivers a sleek and otherworldly closer that keeps the body moving while the mind drifts somewhere stranger.
Across four tracks that each showcase different nuances of their sonic vision, Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, and Gal Kinnel show what it can sound like to channel years of dancefloor intuition into groove-forward dancefloor cuts. 'Studio 94' ends up meticulously engineered, effortlessly sexy, and beautifully stripped to its most potent essentials.
'Wood' opens with a body-moving groove stripped to its pulsing core, with a shuddering but tasteful bassline revolving around a mesmeric pad. Lush, cerebral chords inject a sense of weightlessness into the track's kinetic drive, while choppy snare rolls open up bursts of biting edge that cut across the rolling groove structure. Spoken word lyrics turn Wood séance-like, drawing the listener into the weightless journey the track conjures.
'Read My Lips' channels the trio's percussive style into a vibrant, high-energy roller. Harder, punchier drum tones, ravey synth salvoes, and constantly cycling tribal undercurrents deliver a drum-forward dance track with spaced-out chord chops that nudge its percussive energy into warehouse territory.
The title track, 'Studio 94', carries a dual meaning: a tribute to the physical space where the music was born-a creative sanctuary at 94 Allenby Street, in the heart of Tel Aviv's raw urban energy-and a nod to the legendary Studio 54, bridging the golden era of club culture with the hardware-driven sound of today's underground. The track itself shows the trio at their most cerebral. A psychedelic, hovering bass tone anchors a beautifully subdued rhythmic architecture, with cavernous vocal chops and cascading cowbell salvoes orbiting the track's spaced-out core. Punchy yet floating, it teases a poppy anthemic hook without ever quite resolving it-the EP's most beguiling and hypnotic track.
'Big Dreams' closes on a darker, more volatile note. Across a stripped, rolling groove with subtle Dembow undertones, Big Dreams folds darkly oscillating alien synthscapes into the trio's stripped elegance. Reassembling their synth work into pulsing sample chops, Big Dreams delivers a sleek and otherworldly closer that keeps the body moving while the mind drifts somewhere stranger.
Across four tracks that each showcase different nuances of their sonic vision, Omri Guetta, Omer Bar, and Gal Kinnel show what it can sound like to channel years of dancefloor intuition into groove-forward dancefloor cuts. 'Studio 94' ends up meticulously engineered, effortlessly sexy, and beautifully stripped to its most potent essentials.
