bleshu Emerges with Call It Even, a Textural Journey Through Modern Electronica

Emerging from the underground with a uniquely textured approach to electronic music, bleshu introduces their project with 'Call It Even', a five track EP that challenges the boundaries of ambient electronics, progressive house, breakbeat, and psychedelic electro. It’s a carefully crafted debut that blurs the lines between the dance floor and solitary headphone moments.

At its core, 'Call It Even' is a sensory journey, an exploration that speaks to the soul and gets you moving in parts. Bleshu’s production leans heavily into atmospheric layers, distinct synth textures, and exemplar percussion, resulting in a listening experience that feels both otherworldly and grounded.
'Call it Even' evokes moods that are immersive, contemplative, and at times euphoric. For fans of artists like Anthony Naples, DJ Python, and Hybrid Man, bleshu’s sound offers a fresh take on familiar terrain, intimate yet expansive, dreamy yet propulsive.
The EP opens in a cinematic hush. “Entrée” is a slow burning invitation into bleshu’s world, cloaked in moody ambient swells and submerged synth lines. Gentle textures lap over one another like water on a beautiful shore line, offering a serene prelude that signals what lies ahead. It's less of a track and more of a portal, evocative and meditative.
Up next is “Saturnwind”, a drift that blends lush pads with minimal rhythms. Here, chopped breaks meet spacey synths, forming a textured landscape that feels suspended in zero gravity. The restrained low end and shimmering highs make this track a delicate balance of movement and stillness, soundtrack for an astral projection.
Serving as the centerpiece, the playful and groove heavy “Rimineme” (pronounced re-mine-me) arrives with upbeat energy. Off kilter synth stabs and deep, rolling bass lines bounce through a mesh of intricate percussive details. There's a subtle tension between nostalgia and futurism here, like rediscovering a memory from the rave that never was.
As the EP enters its heavier territory, “Pipeline” digs deep with a more urgent pace. Kicks and warped bass form the track’s backbone, while glitchy textures and ambient overlays expand the track as a whole. It’s a track that feels club ready but introspective, ideal for those in between hours where the room vibrates but the mind wanders.
Closing out the EP is “Programmer”, a track that trades drive for depth. It’s the most introspective cut of the EP, an echo of submerged emotions and hazy melodic patterns. With its restrained rhythm, subtle psychedelia, and melancholic ambiance, “Programmer” feels like It’s a gentle landing after an elevated ride.
With 'Call It Even', bleshu has made a confident and artful entrance into the electronic scene. Each track stands on its own while also contributing to a cohesive emotional arc. The EP plays like a story, one told in textures and rhythm rather than words.
For a debut release, it’s refreshingly self assured, suggesting bleshu is not just dabbling in the realm of electronic experimentation, but actively shaping it.