Gi Gi is a producer and DJ drawn to the porous edges of electronic music, where atmosphere and motion sit in constant negotiation. His productions unfold refractively, assembling fragments of sampled rhythm and texture into forms that resist settling in one place for long. Depending on how they’re encountered, traces of chillout music, shoegaze haze, dub weight, and slow-burn psychedelia come into focus, though never fully resolving into any one lineage.
What anchors the work is a careful sense of tension: rhythm that never pushes too hard, ambience that never drifts too far. Even at its most diffused, there’s always a pulse underneath, a quality that links his music less to genre than a lineage of producers interested in suspension, repetition, and tonal pressure.
That same sensibility carries into his DJ sets, where weightier grooves, ambient passages, and hypnotic transitions are handled with equal patience. The result is a sound that can inhabit smoke-filled clubs, improvised listening spaces, and festival rooms without changing its internal logic.
His releases span Mood Hut (CA), Good Morning Tapes (AUS), Quiet Time (USA), and INDEX:Records (UK), alongside appearances on NTS, The Lot Radio, Refuge Worldwide, and Kiosk Radio. While rooted in a shifting international network of DIY spaces, he’s also appeared at Public Records, Miscellania, and Ormside Projects, sharing bills with artists including Huerco S., ML Buch, PLO Man, RAMZi, Laraaji, and Perila.
Gi Gi describes his process as “dubwise sampledelia.” It begins with fragments and ends somewhere else entirely, destabilizing its source material until it stops pointing backward. A borrowed sound, looped and bent, eventually forgets where it came from; it stops referencing anything but itself.
This liquid sensibility shaped his earlier work, music that hovered between drift and propulsion, suggesting the dance floor without fully stepping onto it. Presence was implied, edges stayed soft. The center was always there, but diffused like mist on a screen.
With In Lieu, that center comes into focus. Half written in Texas, half in Australia, the shift isn’t simply geographic, but internal. The record moves with a coiled, anticipatory energy; the drums arrive with more force and the bass organizes the room instead of melting into it. It's dense with the feeling of more bodies in the frame. Textures still smear and refract, but they move around a clearer axis.
Where past records circled their core, these inhabit it, pulling closer to the body. “Some Of” and “Arque” lean into low-end pressure without abandoning his instinct for drift. "Pink Dirt" circles around mechanical drums and dizzying vocal chops, head-down and visceral. Elsewhere, voices gain newfound contour, materializing in “Downswept” with intimate musings and nearly forming a lead vocal on the title track before dissolving again.
In Lieu moves with a newfound confidence, compressing inward, sounding closer to the source of its own pulse.