Ivy Lab’s "Strange Attractor" moves past their cinematic Infinite Falling Ground phase and straight into the haze of MPC-driven club heat. Pulled from their new album Amigood, the track feels like a reset—stripped of story and built to move bodies.
It starts with digital piano chords and crystalline bubbles before an electric guitar cry and 808 thump break the calm. Soon the air thickens with pitched-up vocal flickers—half ghostly, half playful—that drift around the drums. Ivy Lab fold in chopped breakbeats and a low-pass filtered melody that doubles as a bassline, recalling the murky textures of golden-era beatmakers. At the midpoint, it dips into a submerged groove, then hits with FM bass stabs and pitched-up vocals. By the time the outro drops the drums and lets the chords fade, you're floating in a blissful afterglow.
This music is built to flood a room, not a pair of earbuds. A looser Ivy Lab surfaces here—lighter in touch, sharper in movement, still stamped with their unmistakable fingerprint.