SBTRKT, the famously elusive producer known for pioneering the post-dubstep, future-garage, alt-soul moment of the early 2010s—and then vanishing just as the zeitgeist caught up—has signed with Primary Talent for worldwide representation, excluding the United States. Because of course he did. You don’t build a career on mystique and then go full global. The man has brand integrity. He continues to be managed by Adam Golden at Zeya, whose job description presumably includes things like “coordinate tour logistics” and “maintain the enigma.”
Despite releasing music with the frequency of a lunar eclipse, SBTRKT maintains a devoted fanbase: over 600,000 monthly listeners on Spotify, clustered in taste-forward markets like London, Sydney, Melbourne, Los Angeles, and Brisbane. These are not passive listeners. These are people who still say “post-racial” unironically and believe Thom Yorke should be on every remix.
His latest project, the Turn Your Heart Around EP, dropped independently via SAVE YOURSELF—which sounds like a wellness prompt but is, in fact, the name of his label. The EP is a reminder that SBTRKT hasn’t just been hiding in a mask and a concept. He’s been quietly iterating, expanding the sonic palette without compromising the low-end thump and spectral synths that made his earlier work genre-defining.
Festival-wise, he’s graced the stages of Glastonbury, Coachella, and Sonar—the kinds of festivals where his brand of shadowy maximalism plays well as the sun sets and people start philosophizing about cymbal textures. Now, with Primary Talent on board, don’t be surprised if he reemerges just in time to headline a fog-drenched slot at Primavera, with visuals so abstract you think your phone is glitching.
SBTRKT is not here for your algorithm. He is here for your attention span. Briefly. And then he’ll disappear again.