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MIGS has launched his new imprint Mula with “Talk To Me In Monotone,” a stripped-back tech house single that lays out the label’s direction without overexplaining it. The Miami-based DJ and producer has been building a steady catalog through club-focused releases, and this new imprint gives him a direct outlet for records built for working DJs.

Mula arrives with a clear purpose: functional club music, direct arrangements, and tools that fit naturally into longer sets. MIGS has already released music through Nervous Records, Under No Illusion, Terms and Conditions, Material Series, and Happy Techno, with support from FISHER, Joseph Capriati, Manda Moor, and Oscar G. Those reference points help frame why Mula feels like a logical next step rather than a side project.

“Talk To Me In Monotone” makes that case quickly. The track stays tight, focused, and low to the ground, with punchy drums, rough-edged textures, and a rhythmic structure that keeps pressure moving across the arrangement. It sounds built by someone who understands what DJs actually need once a room is already warm and the set needs a reliable record that will hold its lane.

MIGS Launches Mula With A DJ-First Mission

Mula feels like MIGS giving himself room to release music without filtering every decision through someone else’s label identity. That kind of control can be useful for a producer whose records are clearly made with the booth in mind. The label is positioned around consistency, direct club function, and tracks that avoid trend-chasing in favor of practical use.

That does not mean the music feels generic by any means…

“Talk To Me In Monotone” has a darker tone and a controlled low-end presence, but it keeps the arrangement clean enough for DJs to use it in different parts of a set. The percussion shifts are subtle, the central rhythm stays locked, and the track leaves enough room to blend without stripping away its personality.

For a debut label release, that restraint is smart. MIGS is not trying to make the first Mula record carry a huge mission statement through excessive production. The record does the simpler job well: it tells listeners and DJs what this imprint is built for.

Talk To Me In Monotone Keeps The Club Pressure Tight

The track works because every element seems chosen for a clear purpose. The drums sit at the front, the textures add grit around the edges, and the low-end movement gives the record its darker pull without turning the mix into a pileup. It has the kind of structure that can make a DJ’s job easier, especially in a late-night set where small changes in pressure matter.

MIGS also avoids overloading the record with unnecessary turns. “Talk To Me In Monotone” stays focused on tension, rhythm, and utility, which is exactly the kind of opening release that fits a label built around DJ-ready music.

As a launch point for Mula, the track gives MIGS a clean foundation. It connects his existing momentum to a new platform, and it positions the label as a home for tech house that values control, movement, and practical club use.

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Will Vance is a professional music producer who has been involved in the industry for the better part of a decade and has been the managing editor at Magnetic Magazine since mid-2022. In that time period, he has published thousands of articles on music production, industry think pieces and educational articles about the music industry. Over the last decade as a professional music producer, Will Vance has also ran multiple successful and highly respected record labels in the industry, including Where The Heart Is Records as well as having launched a new label with a focus on community through Magnetic Magazine. When not running these labels or producing his own music, Vance is likely writing for other top industry sites like Waves or the Hyperbits Masterclass or working on his upcoming book on mindfulness in music production. On the rare chance he's not thinking about music production, he's probably running a game of Dungeons and Dragons with his friends which he has been the dungeon master for for many years.