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Stresshead, Ancona And Eddie Caine Capture The Club’s Breaking Point On ‘Grab Me Water’

Stresshead, Ancona and Eddie Caine link up on ‘Grab Me Water’, a new single that leans into the physical side of club music rather than just the surface energy.

Grab Me Water

Released via Promised Land Records and premiered on BBC Radio 1Xtra with CASSKIDD, the track lands somewhere between peak-time intensity and the aftermath that follows it. Built on pulsing basslines, chopped vocals and tight, driving drums, it captures the moment where a room shifts from controlled into something looser, louder, and harder to contain.


There’s a looseness to it, but it never feels accidental. ‘Grab Me Water’ was pulled together the morning after a night out, shaped by that mix of exhaustion and clarity that tends to follow, and that context carries through the track. It doesn’t feel polished for the sake of it. Instead, it holds onto that rough edge, which gives it more character.


Rather than building towards a single drop, the production stays locked into a steady, hypnotic rhythm. That choice works. It pulls you further into the track instead of offering an obvious release, even if it means it doesn’t hit with the same instant impact as more conventional club records.


The accompanying video, directed by Ancona, extends that idea visually. Set in a packed, sweat-heavy club environment, it focuses on bodies in motion and the intensity that builds when a space starts to overheat. It keeps things direct and avoids over-staging the moment.



‘Grab Me Water’ also arrives as a counterpoint to the trio’s previous single ‘STANDING STILL SCREAMING LOUD’, written across the same weekend. Where that track leaned towards release, this one sits closer to the edge of burnout, trading uplift for something more immediate and physical.


Individually, all three artists have been building within the UK electronic space, but here the focus is on the chemistry. The track works because it doesn’t try to stretch beyond its idea. It stays locked into its mood and commits to it fully.


As a result, ‘Grab Me Water’ feels less like a traditional club track and more like a snapshot of a moment you recognise straight away, one that captures both the high and the point where it starts to tip over.



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