Baset and Bittermind have joined forces on ‘Feel Good,’ a melodic techno collaboration out today via Tomorrowland Music. The track has already picked up support from Anyma, Kevin De Vries, Cassian, and others before its official release.
‘Feel Good’ is built on contrast. A calm, repetitive vocal anchors the track with a simple message — enjoy the moment — while an aggressive gliding synth pushes back with intensity. The drums hold those two forces in check, keeping the energy high without losing the emotional weight. The tension never fully resolves, but positivity always wins out. The title isn’t misleading.
Baset is an Egyptian DJ and producer who’s been active since 2014, carving out space in the melodic techno world with a sound that sits comfortably on festival stages and headphone listening alike. His 2022 collaboration ‘Sierra’ with Argy on Cercle Records crossed 50 million streams and earned a Gold certification in France. He’s since landed releases on Afterlife and Interscope — including ‘Neverland’ alongside Anyma — and has earned plays from the likes of Tale Of Us, ARTBAT, David Guetta, and Pete Tong, with stage slots at Tomorrowland and Ushuaïa to match.
Bittermind is a Turkish producer known for blending deep emotion with driving basslines and atmospheric textures. His track ‘Resonance’ has earned support from Tiësto, Anyma, and Massano, and his sets have appeared on major stages worldwide. His influence on the underground side of the sound is clearly present in ‘Feel Good.’
According to both artists, the collaboration was built around restraint. Rather than piling on new elements, they focused on arrangement, energy flow, and letting each part land exactly where it needed to. The track was tested and refined on the dancefloor before they committed to releasing it.
Live, the track functions almost like a reset. Dropped in the middle of a heavy, dark set, the vocal loop catches the room off guard — tension dissolves, people start smiling, then singing along without quite realizing it. Baset has described it as a tool to break the expectations of a peak-time melodic techno set and bring something more human into the room.
Both artists were clear about the intent: this wasn’t meant to be just another dark techno record. The goal was to bring hope into the darkness — to capture that specific club moment where the music is heavy but the crowd is smiling. ‘Feel Good’ lands squarely in that space.
