Tag Archives: greg

[House] San Pacho x Greg – Lights Off/Born Funky

San Pacho and Greg (BR) link up on Lights Off / Born Lucky, a focused two-tracker out now via Cloonee’s Terminal Underground. Both cuts are built for movement—no fluff, no filler—just groove-forward, high-functioning tech house ready for rotation.

“Lights Off” leans into a hypnotic Afro-Latin rhythm, built around a rolling low-end and just enough melodic lift to keep things moving late into the night. “Born Lucky” flips the energy with tighter drums, vocal edits, and a rubbery bassline that cuts straight through. Different directions, same end goal: club function, dialed in.

Greg (BR) has been building momentum fast—his Cloonee collab “Still My Baby” recently hit #1 on Beatport’s global chart, and his catalog stretches across respected labels like Nervous, Moodchild, and Repopulate Mars. His sound pulls from Afro and Latin house but stays grounded in the pocket, engineered for movement.

San Pacho, meanwhile, continues to solidify his lane. His blend of Latin energy and tech house structure has earned support from Tiësto, Diplo, Alesso, and MK, with a run of releases across Insomniac, Confession, and hau5trap. With nearly a million monthly Spotify listeners, he’s one of the more consistent names pushing high-function club tracks right now.

Together, they hit a clear stride with Lights Off / Born Lucky. No heavy concept, no overthinking—just two sharp tracks designed for DJs who want something that simply works.

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[House] GREG (BR) – Ibiza Nights

GREG (BR), fresh off a Beatport chart-topper with Cloonee, returns with “Ibiza Nights”—a smooth, groove-forward single that pairs classic house nostalgia with modern Afro-house polish. Built on rolling percussion, warm basslines, and an unmistakable vocal hook, the track leans into timeless energy without losing its contemporary edge.

The production is clean and confident. Rather than chase trends, “Ibiza Nights” settles into a pocket—balancing sun-drenched synth work and rhythmic builds that feel equally fit for sunset sets or late-night club floors. There’s no flash, just finely tuned atmosphere and flow.

Hailing from Minas Gerais, Brazil, GREG draws heavily from Afro and Latin house roots—infusing each track with a percussive warmth that truly cuts through. His breakout moment came via “Still My Baby,” but “Ibiza Nights” reinforces that he’s not just passing through the scene. It’s another notch in a catalog built for the dance floor, crafted with a steady hand and unmistakable style.

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