09/02/2026
Zapraszam do krótkiego wywiadu 👇👇👇
Adnable is a Katowice-based DJ who has been exploring genres based on broken rhythm since her early days on the club scene. Her cradle is electro, but currently her selection is dominated by a wide-ranging bass sound, which is hard to classify unequivocally. She doesn't close herself off by genre, so a wide musical spectrum can be heard in her sets. She mixes with boldness and experimentation. Adnable is also the promoter and curator of the "G-**OT" and ''HERtz" series of events that support women in the club scene. She is also active under the banner of Fisherman's Bass Club, with which she organizes events dedicated to fans of deep bass sounds.
❓How has your approach to DJing — and to yourself as an artist — changed over the years?
I used to feel enormous pressure to meet expectations and play “the right way.” Today, I know that my greatest strength is authenticity. As an artist, I’ve learned to trust my intuition. However, my approach to narrating a mix hasn’t changed – from the very beginning, I had a mission in my head to consistently build the story I want to show to others.
❓You’re the promoter and curator behind the G-**OT and HERtz event series. What sparked their creation?
I was pushed to create the G-**OT series by the situation of women on the Katowice scene. When I started playing (and it wasn’t that long ago), there were very few girls on the local scene. The main goal of G-**OT was to encourage girls to bring their music to a wider audience, but also to promote cool female artists who have been on the scene for longer.
The HERtz series, on the other hand, is not a club series, but a summer outdoor series, which is why it features a lighter selection but in different genres.
Both series have the same message: promoting women on the scene and encouraging them to take their music to the stage.
❓Electro was your starting point — what felt most open and flexible about that genre for you, and what initially drew you to it?
I fell in love with it long before it even occurred to me to try my hand at DJing. I was captivated by its broken beat, which still sticks with me to this day. From the beginning, I mainly explored electro with a more bass-oriented approach, but it wasn’t the only genre in my selection – I always mixed it primarily with breaks, but also with techno. In general, broken genres opened my mind to multi-genre music. For a long time now, the sounds of these ‘core’ genres have been intertwining and the boundaries have been blurring. I think this has shaped my open-minded approach to combining different styles to some extent, and bass-heavy electro itself was the starting point for exploring other bass-heavy genres that dominate my set today – which you can hear in my set, by the way.
❓What role does intuition play in your DJing compared to technical preparation?
Intuition plays a huge role in my mix, because when playing multi-genre sets, you have to use different mixing styles. What works well when combining techno will not always sound good in UK Bass, etc. Intuition dominates when it comes to blending tracks, but in order to be able to surrender to it 100%, you need to know your selection inside out – that’s what the feeling that a track will sound good with another is based on. However, knowing your folders is essential when playing.
❓Does moving between genres give you a sense of freedom, or does it require constant balance and control? How do you approach that space?
It definitely gives me a sense of freedom, super fun and ease behind the decks, which I have learned to adapt well to the event I am playing at over time. Being open to different genres and my ability to combine them allows me to feel comfortable at different types of events. In my opinion, I’m quite bold when it comes to combining different genres, but I love doing it, which is evident on stage, and the audience always ‘buys’ this authenticity, thanks to which the dance floor draws on this energy.