Whoop! Records gathers some of its pantheon of artists and re-mixes them to celebrate its 50th release over the past six years.
Tarantella launch the progressive proceedings with their own remix of 'Saturn'. A dark journey to the underside, it features a monster, no-holds barred synth riff that has great similarities to the main synth line from Emperor Sly's 1997 opus 'Didgeridogs'.
Skynet's 'Clear Skies' (Graeme L remix) rumbles along satisfyingly in a deep groove but is let down by moany vocals, then it's back to Tarantella for the Pussy 2000 remix of 'Natural', which harks back to 'older-style', atmospheric trance in its long, winding riffs and choppy vocal lines.
Last in the pack is Nick Muir's Cabala track 'Dark Blue', complete with a Human Movement remix. This is the most uplifting tune on the EP, with an anthemic keyboard riff that grooves with the sort of key changes that can ignite the flames of madness on the dance floor.