- Digital
Lixo
Do What?
GETME!
- Cat No: GME027
- Release: 2026-05-08
- updated:
GETME! announces its latest release: Lixo's new single 'Do What?', taken from the upcoming three-track EP of the same name.
Leaning into a 140 BPM framework, the EP builds on the language introduced in 'Tolerance', pushing further into percussive, system-driven territory while retaining the fluidity and space that defines Lixo's work. Ethereal yet weighty, the tracks balance stripped, rhythmic pressure with more atmospheric elements—moving between club functionality and more abstract, forward-facing forms.
Shaped by London club culture and the evolution of its scenes over the past two decades, the EP draws from a lineage of sounds while resisting nostalgia—absorbing influences from grime, dubstep and experimental club music into something fluid and contemporary. The result is a body of work that feels both immediate and exploratory: rooted in sound system culture, yet unconstrained by it.
Previous single 'Tolerance' saw Lixo collaborate with LYAM, with The Face noting how the track features "breathily rapped vocals over warping synths and a galloping club beat which seems to subtly increase with velocity," highlighting the level of sonic detail in the production.
It's exactly the kind of "erratic, spacey and downright powerful music that GETME! is all about" (Mixmag), with Lixo continuing to shape a distinct sonic identity within that space.
Lixo is the production alias of Alex Hislop, founder of the influential London party collective GETME!. "Once the blushing young debutante of UK dance culture, the label has become a revered hub for new music, a showcase for underground styles" (Clash). With a catalogue spanning over 20 releases—including work from Lil Jabba, Trim, Slime, Becoming Real and Dam Mantle—and appearances across Rinse FM, NTS, Radar, Balamii and BBC Radio 1Xtra, GETME! has spent the past 17 years at the centre of London's progressive music landscape.
Alongside his artist work, Lixo composes bespoke music and sound design for global brands including Miu Miu, Alexander McQueen, Lanvin, Cav Empt and Nike, bringing the same attention to texture, rhythm and detail to both commercial and club contexts.
Leaning into a 140 BPM framework, the EP builds on the language introduced in 'Tolerance', pushing further into percussive, system-driven territory while retaining the fluidity and space that defines Lixo's work. Ethereal yet weighty, the tracks balance stripped, rhythmic pressure with more atmospheric elements—moving between club functionality and more abstract, forward-facing forms.
Shaped by London club culture and the evolution of its scenes over the past two decades, the EP draws from a lineage of sounds while resisting nostalgia—absorbing influences from grime, dubstep and experimental club music into something fluid and contemporary. The result is a body of work that feels both immediate and exploratory: rooted in sound system culture, yet unconstrained by it.
Previous single 'Tolerance' saw Lixo collaborate with LYAM, with The Face noting how the track features "breathily rapped vocals over warping synths and a galloping club beat which seems to subtly increase with velocity," highlighting the level of sonic detail in the production.
It's exactly the kind of "erratic, spacey and downright powerful music that GETME! is all about" (Mixmag), with Lixo continuing to shape a distinct sonic identity within that space.
Lixo is the production alias of Alex Hislop, founder of the influential London party collective GETME!. "Once the blushing young debutante of UK dance culture, the label has become a revered hub for new music, a showcase for underground styles" (Clash). With a catalogue spanning over 20 releases—including work from Lil Jabba, Trim, Slime, Becoming Real and Dam Mantle—and appearances across Rinse FM, NTS, Radar, Balamii and BBC Radio 1Xtra, GETME! has spent the past 17 years at the centre of London's progressive music landscape.
Alongside his artist work, Lixo composes bespoke music and sound design for global brands including Miu Miu, Alexander McQueen, Lanvin, Cav Empt and Nike, bringing the same attention to texture, rhythm and detail to both commercial and club contexts.
