Fleanger‘s latest EP “Soul Logic” transforms contradictory emotions into hypnotic melodic house.
The newest EP from Fleanger, “Soul Logic,” provides this rare quality with amazing accuracy. The Berlin-based producer works with up-and-coming artist NIRØ and singer Romy Dya to make a track that goes beyond typical genre lines while still staying true to its rhythmic house roots.
The hum of vintage synths and the restless spirit of Berlin meet in a dimly lit studio where Fleanger and NIRØ make a track that does not just thump but thinks.
NIRØ is a young DJ and producer from the suburbs of Tel Aviv. He learnt to play drums, piano, violin, and other instruments over many years while going to clubs and music events in Tel Aviv.
Romy Dya is an amazing R&B/Soul and Pop singer, songwriter, and producer who has worked in the music business for a long time. She has worked with well-known international acts like Busta Rhymes and Ghostface Killah, but her big break came in 2017 when she was on Martin Garrix, David Guetta, and Jamie Scott’s hit song “So Far Away.”
The magic of the group is clear. Both Fleanger and NIRØ are into organic sounds, and their music makes you feel like you are riding a bus through Berlin at midnight.
“Soul Logic” works on more than one level at the same time. The track’s technical structure shows careful attention to spatial dynamics—as the piece goes on, private voice sections grow into huge reverberant areas.
This changing of sound space is like the EP’s main idea, which is the strange pull between intuitive feeling and logical thinking. The mixed vocals on this release are what set it apart from many other rhythmic house albums.
Dya’s performance wasn’t captured in a single take but constructed through multiple emotional iterations—whispered confessions layered against more assertive declarations. This production choice creates a fascinating internal dialogue that perfectly complements the track’s conceptual framework.
The production team deliberately blurred boundaries between organic and synthetic elements. Field recordings provide subtle environmental textures while analogue synthesizers introduce controlled imperfections that humanize the electronic scene.
This mixed method keeps the track from sounding clinically accurate, instead letting it breathe with spontaneous changes.
In this day and age of “vibes over substance,” “Soul Logic” sounds like a protest. It does not just copy feeling; it breaks it down and puts it back together with echo and determination.
From a musical point of view, “Soul Logic” has some really cool structure creativity. Instead of sticking to typical structures, the track builds up as a story with stress and relief that you would not expect.
Based on deep house traditions, the bass frequencies stay warm and comforting, while the higher frequencies stay crystal clear, giving the mix vertical dimension.
Fleanger’s inspirations are clear throughout, but it does not feel like a copy. There are emotional depths like in RY X and Monolink, hypnotic percussion sounds like in Black Coffee and &ME, and movie-like sounds like in Tale of Us. Despite this, the EP stays unique thanks to Fleanger’s unique sound style.

The record has a lot of Berlin influences, which is not a surprise given how much the city has changed electronic music over the years. To give it another angle, Fleanger has ties to Tel Aviv’s lively music scene; he just played at The Place Club in February.
For listeners seeking electronic music with substantive emotional weight, “Soul Logic” delivers a compelling experience. The EP functions equally well as immersive headphone listening or as a dynamic addition to club environments where deeper currents of feeling are welcome alongside rhythmic intensity.
What remains most impressive about this release is how it balances seemingly contradictory elements: technical sophistication with emotional vulnerability, structural complexity with intuitive flow, intimate moments with expansive atmospheres.
Through these contrasts, Fleanger has created a work that reflects love’s fundamental paradox—simultaneously irrational and inevitable, mysterious yet instantly recognizable.