
Spreading the wealth, fellow Jersey DJ Paul Desisto says, “The best remix that I’ve found, and has the best reaction, is by Major Lazer featuring Nyla and Kranium. In 2016, most of the popular or best dance tracks have been in the 90-110 BPM range, dramatically shifting out of the 128 BPM, head-banger, EDM/house sound. The original ‘Shape of You’ is 95 BPM, and the remix is sped up to 105. It’s the perfect tempo for many of the popular club tracks that have been released the last 12 months” (such as “Closer” by The Chainsmokers featuring Halsey, and tracks by Justin Bieber, Drake and Rihanna).
Houston-based club and radio DJ/remixer Rich Pangilinan (“The Riddler”) extolls the virtues of Sheeran’s original track, as well as Maz’s and Lazer’s versions. “When I first heard the record, I immediately started to play it in the club even before the remixes came out,” he says. “The original just works because lyrically it speaks to young people. Once the remixes came out, I started playing the Joe Maz and now the Major Lazer remix that fits in with my downtempo 100-108 BPM sets. It’s still a peak-hour record for me and probably will be for a while.”
San Diego DJ/producer Ayla Simone adds, “Ed Sheeran’s music, with its wholesome-yet-edgy quality, works well on so many dance floors because he has a rhythmic, melodic groove that sounds sophisticated with his British accent, yet relatable through his heartfelt lyrics.
“I’ve played ‘Shape of You’ just about everywhere from Florent Lounge in the Gaslamp (Quarter) to a corporate event in Seattle to the big stage at Lex Nightclub in Reno. The track is a solid set opener that gets people feeling good and out on the dance floor. The remixes that work best for me are from James Carter and Levi, when I am playing songs around 100 BPM, or from Midi Culture when I’m dropping a house set. Both have a nice groove and bounce to them that, without going too hard, really set things off.”
H/T: Billboard

