H2SO4 “Feel the Frequency Dntless Trap Mix (feat. Mavis)”



H2SO4 Rewire the Circuitry with “Feel the Frequency (Dntless Trap Mix feat. Mavis)”


There’s a pulsing moment, about 50 seconds into Feel the Frequency (Dntless Trap Mix), when the beat breaks apart like a star collapsing—and then reconstructs itself into something even more potent. That moment captures exactly what H2SO4 does best: transmuting raw sound into electrified soul.

Originally a remix-driven brainchild of the electro pioneers behind CODE and indie experimentalists Sulphur, H2SO4 has always thrived in the shadows between genres. On this newest single, the London-based duo—Graham Cupples and James Butler—team up with fearless producer Dntless and rising vocal powerhouse Mavis to create a shape-shifting, genre-skirting banger that feels like it was beamed in from a dystopian nightclub three years into the future.

The Dntless Trap Mix is exactly what it promises—a fusion of digital grit and trap swagger, underpinned by immaculate production. This isn’t just bass drops and hi-hat rolls slapped onto a synth-pop skeleton. It’s precision-designed chaos, woven with care. Each layer of the mix builds on the last, leading you into a fog of broken dreams and synthetic adrenaline.

Mavis steals the show. Her vocals drift between haunting restraint and explosive vulnerability, calling to mind the ghostly ache of Poliça’s Channy Leaneagh and the raw dynamism of early Sia. She floats above the chaos, a spectral narrator guiding us through a world of flickering frequencies and psychic overload.

There’s a latent nostalgia tucked into the circuitry here too. Longtime fans of H2SO4 will recognize the band’s DNA—an enduring sense of melodic melancholy, wrapped in futuristic tension. But Dntless pushes them somewhere new, away from the static past and toward something leaner, meaner, and far more dangerous.

This isn’t a song built for passive listening—Feel the Frequency demands your full attention. It’s H2SO4 reborn in the afterburn of a trap explosion, proving that even after decades on the fringe, they’re still one step ahead of the curve.

H2SO4 didn’t just feel the frequency—they bent it to their will.

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