
Harrison BDP stands as one of the true masters of that off-world deep house sound. Easily one of the most consistent producers of the past five years, so having the Welsh wizard launch the first 12” on Jupiter’s Depth is iconic. The EP delivers it all — from deep, trippy journeys to pacey dub-techno rollers. No question, another Discogs relic in the making — 300 press, so move quick.
“So What” finds Harrison BDP deep in his element. It’s immersion at its purest — a rolling house trip where fizzy sci-fi textures and dubbed-out chords dissolve into each other like smoke and signal. The sound design is hyper-detailed and hallucinatory, living somewhere between science fiction and dream. As the groove turns, a voice drifts through the haze, whispering a line from the void: be the space at the centre.
“Mushy Peas” follows, and the name might hint at playfulness, but don’t be fooled — this one’s the record’s most direct, peak-time driver.
Classic ’90s lead work meets his trademark dubbed-out touch — simple, heavy, and built to move a floor.
“Chizz for Brains” kicks off with a warped percussion loop that scrambles your brain before the drop even hints at arriving. Alien FX orbit the rhythm, giving it that off-world tension — like touching down on Jupiter mid-set. It’s cinematic, weird, and still locked into an unmistakable groove. A head-knocker through and through.
“Cherry” hits with intent — moody, stripped-back, and fierce. The bassline loops like muscle memory, pulling you into that space between dub techno’s depth and house’s drive. Pads hang in the air like something between horror and heaven, eerie but euphoric. It’s freaky in the best way — the kind of tension BDP turns into groove.