
Oliverio Sofia joins the label with the impressive 'Agua'. Remix support comes from Dario Arcas and Sebastian Busto.
As a pioneer of the Argentinian progressive sound, Oliverio has soundtracked a generation. Breaking onto the scene at the turn of the century with performances at Creamfields BA, Pacha, and many others, a well-regarded radio show on Metro 951 (Argentina's best electronic station), and 3 of his music videos on MTV. Forming Soundexile with Baunder in 2006 saw the duo reach even bigger heights and on slipping in 2008, he had worked closely with Hernan as well as releasing tracks on the biggest global labels such as Global Underground, Urbantorque and Plastik Park.
It's no surprise then that 'Agua' is exceptional. The soft relaxing piano and orchestral movements of the original ambient version are transported into a mid-set bruiser on the club mix becoming brief moments of reflective introspection. On remix duties, Dario Arcas keeps it deep and hypnotic, building on a claustrophobic low end with delicate and melancholic piano. Sebastian Busto creates a deep pumping groover that teases the original motifs until the epic and understated main break.
As a pioneer of the Argentinian progressive sound, Oliverio has soundtracked a generation. Breaking onto the scene at the turn of the century with performances at Creamfields BA, Pacha, and many others, a well-regarded radio show on Metro 951 (Argentina's best electronic station), and 3 of his music videos on MTV. Forming Soundexile with Baunder in 2006 saw the duo reach even bigger heights and on slipping in 2008, he had worked closely with Hernan as well as releasing tracks on the biggest global labels such as Global Underground, Urbantorque and Plastik Park.
It's no surprise then that 'Agua' is exceptional. The soft relaxing piano and orchestral movements of the original ambient version are transported into a mid-set bruiser on the club mix becoming brief moments of reflective introspection. On remix duties, Dario Arcas keeps it deep and hypnotic, building on a claustrophobic low end with delicate and melancholic piano. Sebastian Busto creates a deep pumping groover that teases the original motifs until the epic and understated main break.
More from Sudbeat Music
Recommended For You


























