EDM GOD Sends Whoopa Straight to the Peak-Time Techno Floor
A Hua Hin Producer Builds a Relentless Club Track for Hardstyle and Techno Fans
Out now on every major platform, Whoopa is the new techno single from EDM GOD, an electronic producer working out of Hua Hin, Thailand. He builds the track around a driving rhythm and hard-edged synth lines. It points straight at peak-time club sets and the hardstyle and techno crowds who live for the drop. It is a functional club record first, made to play loud in a full room, not studied on headphones.
You can listen to our full playlist which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


EDM GOD Builds Whoopa on a Relentless Rhythm and Hard Synth Lines
EDM GOD engineers Whoopa for the loudest stretch of the night. The rhythm sits front and centre. It holds an unbroken pulse that keeps the pressure on instead of letting the groove breathe. The synth lines cut hard and bright, so they carry over a packed floor. The tempo holds firm from the first bar. As a result, that is exactly what a DJ wants when a track locks into a peak-time run.
The production leans into aggression on purpose. There is no long, decorative build, and no soft landing between sections. EDM GOD keeps the arrangement tight and forward. For instance, he stacks the kick, the rhythm, and those synth stabs into a single push toward the drop. For anyone mixing a club set, that restraint matters as much as the raw energy. Every element in Whoopa points at the dance floor, and he leaves nothing spare. The sound design stays aggressive throughout, and the tempo never wavers, so the track behaves predictably in a mix even while it hits hard.

Where EDM GOD Places Whoopa Between Hard Techno and Hardstyle
Whoopa plants itself in the harder end of techno while it nods openly to the hardstyle crowd it courts. Fill a set with peak-time techno and you will recognise the same kick-forward drive that Charlotte de Witte rides through her KNTXT nights. There, the groove strips down to its most physical parts and pushes loud. A kinship runs, too, to the high-BPM acid pressure that Amelie Lens built her name on. Both share that sense of a track pinning a room in place and refusing to let up.
The hardstyle lean shows in the intensity rather than the tempo. By contrast, a lot of techno keeps a cool distance. Whoopa wants contact instead, the blunt, chest-hitting force that hardstyle crowds expect from a peak-time record. That crossover instinct keeps one foot in techno’s machine precision and one in hardstyle’s raw punch. As a result, it hands the single reach across two scenes that do not always share a dance floor.
From the TopMusic.News Curator Team: “What sells Whoopa is discipline. EDM GOD resists the urge to over-decorate, and that restraint is exactly why the drop lands as hard as it does when it finally arrives.”

Who EDM GOD Built Whoopa For, and Why Curators Reach for It
EDM GOD’s Whoopa targets a clear listener. It aims at techno and hardstyle club people, the ones who hunt down new peak-time weapons. They judge a record by what it does at 2am, not on a commute. The global release spans Europe and the Middle East through Asia and the Americas. As a result, that reach hands curators across those regions a ready-made shot of high-energy techno for their playlists and club sets.
EDM GOD is direct about the intent. “With ‘Whoopa,’ I wanted to create something that truly captures the raw energy and intensity of a late-night club set,” the producer explains. “This track is built for those who live for the drop, for the relentless beat that drives you forward.” In short, that framing fits the record. Every choice in the arrangement serves the moment on the floor, and the single wants the room EDM GOD made it for.
For a curator programming a peak-time block, Whoopa offers a dependable lift. It brings a clear structure, a tempo that matches other hard techno and hardstyle selections, and a drop that resets a room without demanding a long mix. Its reach runs deliberately wide, from Australia and New Zealand across the Gulf, through East and Southeast Asia, into Europe and the Americas. In addition, that spread reflects how portable hard techno has become as a global club language. A track like this needs no translation. The kick and the drop carry the same weight in Bangkok, Berlin, or Sao Paulo.
EDM GOD’s Wider Catalogue and Where to Follow Next
EDM GOD’s Whoopa comes from a producer whose broader catalogue reaches past straight techno. He works across EDM and vocal dance, and he pairs heavy beats with more melodic ideas. So this single reads as the harder, club-focused edge of a wider palette rather than the whole picture. Still, that range has already drawn notice beyond the clubs. The producer recently sat down for a European Indie Music Network interview that traces his move from melodic EDM into harder, festival-facing sound. On Whoopa, that range narrows to one purpose, and the result is the most floor-ready side of the project.
The single is out now worldwide. You can pick it up across every service through the Distrobolt smartlink. In addition, follow the artist on Apple Music, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music to keep the harder side of the project on your radar.
To follow what comes next, connect with EDM GOD across Instagram, TikTok, X, Facebook, and the YouTube channel. You can also join the community directly on Discord.


