King Street hits its 2000th and, rather than polishing the plaque, invites Sonic Soul Orchestra and Mishell Ivon to scuff the dancefloor properly.

One Love keeps the flame alive—glowing with that unmistakable house—radiating warmth and insisting on movement like a gentle bouncer with perfect taste. It’s a sermon from a succulent pulpit: positivity, pulse, people together in the strobe.

This is why King Street endures. From Masters At Work and Tenaglia to Ferrer, Chandler and the Ananda dreamers, the label’s always balanced royalty with the right-now. SSO x Mishell don’t imitate that legacy; they add a fresh chapter. A sterling dispatch from the evergreen camp King Street—file under: proof that milestones are for dancing past, not posing beside.

Links:

King Street Sounds

Sonic Soul Orchestra

Mishell Ivon

Discoholics Anonymous doesn’t ask for cookies. It slips them into your pocket while you’re not looking, the way clubs used to slip flyers into your coat lining at 4:37 in the morning. Some of them are harmless — the house keys. They keep the lights on, remember who you are, stop the whole thing collapsing when you hit refresh. Without them the site is just a room with no door. The others are curious little spies. They want to know which mixes you stayed for, which ones you ghosted, whether you