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Genre

brazilian tech house

Top Brazilian tech house Artists

Showing 11 of 11 artists
1

1,203

31,020 listeners

2

1,952

14,592 listeners

3

581

8,088 listeners

4

94

938 listeners

5

483

899 listeners

6

253

579 listeners

7

481

477 listeners

8

3,709

458 listeners

9

2,623

354 listeners

10

44

71 listeners

11

264

26 listeners

About Brazilian tech house

Brazilian tech house is a vibrant fusion of Brazilian groove and the lean, hypnotic energy of European tech house. It sits around the 120–128 BPM range, with four-on-the-floor rhythms, stripped-down drums, and a focus on basslines that lock you in and keep you moving. What sets it apart is how Brazilian percussion, samba-inspired accents, and tropical swing slip into the minimalist, club-ready textures of tech house. The result is tracks that feel both cosmopolitan and distinctly Brazilian, balancing punchy immediacy with a sultry, dance-floor sensibility.

Historically, tech house as a global movement emerged in the late 1990s and early 2000s, rooted in the UK and continental Europe as producers fused house positivity with techno’s machine-like precision. Brazil’s scene began to absorb that sound more fully in the 2010s, when a new generation of Brazilian DJs and producers started releasing tech house-cut tracks on international labels like Toolroom, Defected, Spinnin’ Records and other global platforms. Brazilian venues such as Warung Beach Club in Santa Catarina and clubs in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro became incubators for a dance culture that prized groove, percussion, and a party-ready mood. The result was a wave of productions that kept the dance floor moving while infusing the style with Brazilian tempo, funkiness, and feel-good tropical energy.

In terms of ambassadors and key artists, Vintage Culture stands out as one of the most visible faces of Brazilian tech house today. His productions often blend catchy vocal hooks and Brazilian groove with the streamlined, peak-time energy of tech house, helping bring the sound to international audiences and festival main stages. Alongside him, a broader cohort of Brazilian producers—many of them rising through local labels and streaming platforms—continues to push the sound outward, touring globally and releasing tracks on prominent tech-house and house imprints. The Brazilian approach often emphasizes groove-forward basslines, tight percussion, and a melodic warmth that keeps things club-friendly even when the arrangement is minimal. This combination has helped Brazilian tech house find fans not only in Latin America but in Europe, North America, and beyond.

Brazilian tech house is most popular in Brazil’s major urban hubs—São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and surrounding regions—but its appeal extends across South America and into Europe, with particular resonance in Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom, where the Touch of samba-infused groove and exuberant dance-floor energy feel especially at home. Festivals and clubs that celebrate electronic music frequently feature Brazilian acts, and many Brazilian producers tour internationally, collaborating with labels and artists across the global Tech House ecosystem.

If you’re listening with a discerning ear, you’ll hear the Brazilian flavor in the swing of the percussion, the warmth of the bass, and the way a track can move from a hypnotic groove to a peak-time eruption without losing its character. Brazilian tech house isn’t just a regional flavor—it’s a groove-driven approach to club music that speaks both to samba heritage and to the universal language of the dance floor.