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Breach (Walk Alone)

2018 single by Martin Garrix and Blinders From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Breach (Walk Alone)
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"Breach (Walk Alone)" is a song by Dutch DJ Martin Garrix and Polish DJ Blinders,[2] The song was written by Garrix, Blinders,Dewain Whitmore and Ilsey Juber, With Juber Performing Uncredited Vocals.[3] It is released via Stmpd label which is exclusively licensed to Epic Amsterdam, a division of Sony Music. and is included in Garrix's five-track Bylaw EP.[4]

Quick Facts Single by Martin Garrix and Blinders, from the EP Bylaw ...
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Background

Described as a "pulsing, industrial electro-house tune," the song is described as taking Garrix back to his "electro roots".[4] Initially, the song was revealed on a mysterious website that published an artwork detailing songs from the now-released Plus EP.[5] Among the songs was Breach (Walk Alone), that has been released as the first single from the EP and the first of five songs for a series of daily releases that had begun on 15 October 2018.[5] With elements of big room house, the song is composed of a "synth melody rife with tension builds up to a drop" and vocals of a female singer.[5] The song was premiered at the Tomorrowland 2018 festival during Garrix's stage performance.[6]

The song was described as "powered by a lead line that recalls classic hard house, it's an enormous slab of electro house with a sweet female vocal at its core. A serious fist-pumper of a track, it's been one of the most sought-after tracks in the scene since Garrix dropped it on Tomorrowland."[7] Consisting of two builds, it follows with a huge drop with bass sounds and synths.[8]

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Music video

In the music video written and directed by Damian Karsznia,[9] Garrix and Blinders make a cameo appearance.[4] The video is noted for its late-nineties "concepts of crypto-apocalypse". It features the main model (Ihor Bliusovych) battling his way through a red and blue "virtual-obsessed" world.[4][9] The credits feature cinematographer Julian Lomaga, script editors Mees Roozen, David Haringsma and Rick Batenburg, and editors Dieko Mirza, Damian Karsznia and Mees Roozen.[9]

The video was noted for having "Scanner Darkly-esque visuals that feature Garrix along with a number of unidentified individuals in what seems to be a drug-fueled nightclub experience."[10][11]

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References

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