11/08/2025
Witte hot album review in "After 15 years of propelling herself to key-player status in the scene of global techno, Belgian DJ and producer presents her eponymous debut full-length album. Released on her own imprint, the 11-track LP serves as both a consolidation of her club dominance and a tightly controlled showcase of her sonic identity.
This is straight-ahead techno: propulsive, acid-laced, and engineered with clinical precision. Tracks like “The Realm,” “No Division (feat. XSALT),” “Vidmahe,” “Memento Mori,” and “Become,” deliver muscular grooves that fit comfortably into the current techno blueprint. They are flawlessly produced and effective on the dance floor, though they rarely stretch beyond genre convention. Charlotte de Witte herself has described the project as a “true DJ album,” and it succeeds squarely on those terms.
The record’s most intriguing moments arrive when Charlotte de Witte pushes her creativity past its already-abundant standards. “The Heads That Know,” with Comma Dee, injects a rap-infused swagger and is an album highlight, while “Domine,” “After The Fall (feat. Lisa Gerrard),” and “Hymn” carry an unexpectedly cinematic wash at their peak. “Matière Noire (feat. Alice Evermore)” closes the album with haunting drama. These excursions hint at a willingness to expand techno’s sonic palette, even if they stop short of outright disruption.
The artist’s self-titled debut album, Charlotte de Witte, is both a confirmation and a question. It confirms her mastery as a DJ-producer who is able to capture and sustain the pulse of the club. However, the LP also asks whether techno, as a genre, is ripe for more radical storytelling and boundary-pushing at the album level. For now, Charlotte de Witte’s debut is a resounding success. The LP is solid, uncompromising, and gently nibbling at the edges of something even greater." 8. https://spillmagazine.com/spill-album-review-charlotte-de-witte-charlotte-de-witte/