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Zizzo World Is Building Momentum That’s Hard to Ignore

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Most producers spend years chasing one big break. Sergiu Cociorva, the Moldova-born artist behind Zizzo World, is watching several arrive at once. After years of grinding in bedroom studios from New York to London, the pieces are finally clicking into place in ways that suggest he’s not just having a moment, he’s building momentum.

The numbers tell part of the story. Support from Tiësto, David Guetta, and Calvin Harris. Second place in Spinnup’s Dance Banger competition, judged by Topic. “Roller coaster” hitting No.4 on Spotify’s Top 50 in Latvia. But what makes Zizzo World interesting right now isn’t just the wins, it’s that he’s leveraging them into something bigger. He’s running two labels (One Mood Music and Enjoy Record), producing for other artists, and still pushing his own sound in new directions.

Zizzo World

Case in point: “Body Moving,” his new Afro House track with EARTH VOX LABEL, which dropped November 28. It’s a 2:46 blend of afro rhythms and deep grooves that shows a producer confident enough to step outside his EDM and pop-house comfort zone. The move’s paying off. Blogs and curators are responding positively, and more importantly, it’s opening doors. He’s got a February release coming through Sundle Records via Warner Music Italy, with at least five more releases planned for 2026 and his first full album in the works.

'Body Moving' by Zizzo World
‘Body Moving’ by Zizzo World

This didn’t happen overnight. Zizzo World picked up an accordion at 4, smashed countless brooms pretending they were guitars, played in a college band called Broken Paddle, and started producing in Logic Pro after moving to New York in 2008. Since then, it’s been almost daily work in whatever studio space he could carve out. These days that’s a bedroom setup in London, where he’ll sometimes wake up at 2 AM because inspiration doesn’t keep office hours.

What stands out is how realistic he is about the process. He’s upfront about managing expectations, trusting the grind, and understanding that teams can fall apart if people don’t believe in the timeline. He stopped singing before COVID to focus on production, a practical choice that freed him up to build the infrastructure he needed. Now he’s got two labels, artists he’s working with under both imprints, and enough momentum to start thinking bigger.

Zizzo World

The music itself pulls from everywhere he’s been. Moldova, New York, London, all the collaborations with different artists and personalities along the way. He’s not chasing perfection, he’s chasing sincerity, trying to add value with each release. It’s working because it feels genuine rather than calculated.

His goal goes beyond streams or chart positions. He wants to create spaces where people connect, whether that’s with themselves or with each other. It’s ambitious, but he’s got the work ethic to back it up. Five releases next year, the first album, ongoing projects for artists under his two labels, he’s treating 2026 like someone who’s done the work and is ready to capitalize on it. With the infrastructure in place and the momentum already rolling, Zizzo World isn’t hoping for breaks anymore. He’s making them happen.

Connecrt with Zizzo World via Facebook, YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music, Instagram, TikTok, X, and SoundCloud.

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Lord Conrad Builds a House Anthem Around Dreaming Big on ‘Be Yours’

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Lord Conrad

Lord Conrad wants you to picture the version of your life where everything went right. That’s the idea behind “Be Yours,” the progressive house single the Italian producer released on June 25th. The track runs 3:19, but the feeling it’s chasing sticks around longer than that.

Born Corrado Garibaldi in Milan, Lord Conrad has spent years pushing European EDM into a US market that leans heavily toward hip-hop. He’s one of the few doing it with any real traction. His video for “One More Day” landed on the Seven Hip-Hop channel, which has more than 1.9 million subscribers, and “Deep Love” got picked up by Chili World, sitting north of 1.2 million. He’s also built a following elsewhere, with over 400k on Instagram and a shuffle-dance hit in “Only You” that’s racked up more than 860k views on its official video. “Be Yours” fits that pattern while reaching for something bigger.

The song itself leans on a soulful hook and a lead synth riff you’ll recognize after one listen. Female vocals wash over a wall of synths, and the arrangement splits the difference between full-throttle rave energy and something lighter and more ethereal. It’s built for a festival crowd but doesn’t beat you over the head. That balance is what keeps it from feeling like every other floor-filler chasing summer playlist placement.

Then there’s the video, which runs 5:16 and plays more like a short film than a promo clip. Lord Conrad performs a futuristic DJ set surrounded by supercars, massive crowds, and a wash of next-gen visuals. At one point the Nasdaq spikes to a million, a wink at his other life as a trader and investor.

What holds the whole thing together is the theme Lord Conrad calls “The Dream of Tomorrow.” The pitch is simple. Bet on your own ambition, believe the vision, and act like the future is already yours. Whether that lands as inspiring or a little grandiose probably depends on your tolerance for maximalism, but he commits to it fully, and the commitment is half the appeal.

You can dig into “Be Yours” at Lord Conrad’s website or stream the single here, and follow along on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, and Spotify. For anyone who likes their house music built around dreaming a size too big, that’s the point.

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Lofi Bug Records Is Building A Massive Free Sample Library So Producers Stop Paying To Make Beats

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Lofi Bug

There’s a quiet kind of gatekeeping in music production that nobody talks about much. It’s not who you know or which label signs you. It’s the cost of the raw materials. Loops, drum kits, one-shots, the building blocks of a beat, all of it adds up fast, and for someone making music on a laptop at 2am, those price tags can be the difference between finishing a track and giving up on it. Lofi Bug Records, an independent lo-fi label, is trying to knock that barrier down entirely.

The label is currently putting together a huge sample library that anyone can use for free. Loops, drums and sounds, all royalty free, all available at no cost. Lofi Bug describes the goal plainly: make it one of the biggest free packs out there so producers don’t have to worry about clearing samples or paying for the sounds they’re working with. The pack is still growing, with more being added, but the intent is already clear. The label wants to take the financial guesswork out of starting.

That mission tracks with how Lofi Bug itself came together. It started the way a lot of bedroom projects do, with one person messing around on a laptop late at night, unable to sleep. The first beat wasn’t even good, but it felt good to make, and that feeling turned into a habit. The habit turned into a label. Lofi Bug officially launched in 2024 and grew significantly this year, but the scrappy, do-it-with-what-you-have spirit never went anywhere. If anything, the free sample library is that spirit scaled up.

What makes the library more than a giveaway is the thinking behind it. Lofi Bug describes itself as artist focused and artist run, a place where each artist fully chooses what they make and how they make it. The label frames itself as a community for like-minded people who love lo-fi, and it’s direct about wanting newcomers to feel welcome. The message it keeps coming back to is that you don’t need expensive gear or a big budget to make something good. Start with what you’ve got, keep it fun, and don’t overthink it. A free pack of usable, clearance-free sounds is a pretty literal way to back that up.

For the uninitiated, lo-fi is more a mood than a strict genre. Warm tape hiss, dusty drums, mellow keys, the kind of sound built for studying, relaxing, or those late nights when your brain won’t shut off. Lofi Bug leans into that completely, calling its music warm and a little nostalgic, the sort of thing you put on in the background rather than something loud or demanding your attention. The whole point, as the label puts it, is to help someone chill out and feel a little calmer, whether they’re focusing on work or just getting through a rough night.

The roster reflects that low-key, global spirit. Four artists currently anchor the catalog: Ma Malte from Sweden, Mai Aya from the United States, Ukaleb from Canada, and Mao Mao Cat from Korea. They make calm, late-night beats, and the label handles the parts most independent producers dread. Distribution to every major platform, marketing built around growing real listeners, and rights protection. Lofi Bug has delivered more than 100 releases and reaches over 150 stores and platforms worldwide, including Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, Deezer and Tidal.

The piece that matters most to artists, though, is ownership. With Lofi Bug, you keep all of your rights. You own your masters and your publishing, and the copyright stays yours. The label takes a small cut of royalties for the distribution, marketing and rights work it does, with the rest going to the artist. There’s no fine print designed to take your music away from you, which is a sentence you don’t often get to write about a record label.

The submission process is refreshingly human. Artists send a demo through the contact form, and according to the label, every single one gets listened to personally. No algorithms deciding your fate, just people who actually love the sound. From there, Lofi Bug handles mastering, artwork and distribution, then moves into playlisting and promotion so the artist can get back to making the next track. The label also publishes a guide breaking down how to distribute lo-fi music step by step, covering everything from prepping clean metadata to the difference between going the DIY aggregator route and releasing through a label.

All of which makes the free sample library feel less like a marketing stunt and more like the natural extension of how Lofi Bug already operates. Lo-fi has always been about accessibility, about anyone with a laptop and an idea being able to contribute. A massive pack of sounds, handed out with no strings attached, might be the most honest version of that idea anyone’s tried.

You can find Lofi Bug at lofibug.com or follow the label on Instagram.

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How Generator Engineer and Army Veteran Benjamin Irvine Built NeuroKnights to Teach Kids About Their Brains

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Benjamin Irvine

Benjamin Irvine knows generators. Six years of U.S. Army Airborne service, a career engineering power systems, the kind of training where you don’t improvise your way through a job. None of that explains why he started writing songs later in life, or why those songs are now funding a brain-science platform for kids.

The music came first, almost by accident. Irvine wrote a track called “Never Be Lonely” for his 30th wedding anniversary, a gift to mark thirty years with his wife. Finishing it showed him that music could carry things plain words couldn’t, and that realization sent him back through poems he’d written over the years, reimagining them as full songs. He brought in vocalists, musicians, and producers through Fiverr to turn rough acoustic sketches into finished recordings, handling the words and emotional direction himself while collaborators shaped the arrangements and performances.

Here’s where it gets interesting. The point of all this music was never just to put songs on streaming services. Benjamin Irvine built the catalog to fund NeuroKnights, an educational platform he created to teach kids how their brains actually work.

NeuroKnights is built around a cast of brain-based characters, things like Sir Cortex, Synapse, Amygdala, and NeuroShield, who guide children through stories, games, and challenges about memory, focus, emotional control, and decision-making. There’s a kids portal, a parent control center, brain games, and progress tracking, all kept inside a child-safe environment with no ads. It’s aimed at the 7-to-12 crowd.

The mission comes from a specific frustration. Benjamin Irvine doesn’t think good education should depend on whether a kid happens to live somewhere with strong schools and reliable technology. Plenty of children don’t, and NeuroKnights is his attempt to reach some of them anyway. There’s a forward-looking piece too. Kids are growing up alongside AI that’s reshaping how people learn and work, and rather than treating that as something to fear, the platform frames it as a tool worth understanding.

You can see that thinking in the storytelling. One book concept follows a kid named Sam who takes a sip of an energy drink and accidentally wakes up Addiction, a villain who wraps the brain’s reward center in glowing chains and keeps whispering that Sam needs more to feel okay. The brain’s heroes have to team up to pull him back before he loses the joy he had before. It’s a real lesson about choice and self-control, dressed up in a story a 9-year-old will actually sit through.

What makes this project credible isn’t just the concept. It’s who’s running it.

Before any of the music or the characters, Benjamin Irvine spent six years with U.S. Army Airborne at Fort Bragg. After that he built a career in power generation, working as a generator engineer with a background in turbine and generator service leadership, project management, and advanced electrical testing. He’s a GS Generator Specialist trained through GE Power Systems University, with a business management degree from the University of Phoenix on top of it.

That’s not a typical resume for a children’s education startup, and it shows in how the platform is put together. Engineering work and military service both reward the same thing: structure that holds up under pressure. You don’t improvise a turbine inspection, and you don’t wing safety protocols around an Airborne unit. Irvine brings that same discipline to a product where the stakes are kids’ attention and trust. The child-safe design, the parent controls, the progress tracking, the insistence on no ads, these read less like marketing checkboxes and more like the work of someone trained to build things that hold up under scrutiny.

The music itself is finding an audience while the bigger project takes shape. Irvine reports that songs including “Heads High” and “We Stayed Anyway” have picked up radio play across the U.S., U.K., Germany, France, Italy, Ireland, and a long list of other countries, with airplay he puts at more than 200 stations worldwide. His most-streamed tracks run under Platinum Edition titles like “Heads High,” “Make It Real,” and “STAY,” all available on his Spotify playlist.

Music’s been in his life longer than any of this, for what it’s worth. As a kid he toured to gigs with his grandfather, who fronted a country western cover band called Lloyd Meddock and the Melody Boys. He’s still writing, with five songs in various stages of development, and he’ll tell you he’d love to hear Kane Brown take on a country track he wrote called “Built For the Climb.”

The throughline holds. Irvine still doesn’t improvise. The discipline that ran through six years of Airborne service and a career in power systems is the same thing now holding up a platform built for kids who might not have much else, funded by songs that started as a gift. You can find the rest at NeuroKnights.com or on Facebook and TikTok.

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