It involves an explosive live performance by Schlachthofbronx from Munich, Germany. Incorporating elements of dancehall, dubstep, kuduro, electro, house and folk music alike, their bass-heavy tunes make the perfect soundtrack for another sweaty ghetto rave affair like only Low Up can provide. Bring on the confetti gun, the Bavarians are coming!
/ Listen the minimix and move ur feet!
Here's a little q&a with Jakob and Bene from Schlachthofbronx...
The first question is this picture of Munich nightlife that i found on the internet. Do you perhaps recognize any hardcore Bronx fans?

Ha ha, not really. But... hey, on the left, in the back, ain't that your mother?
How did this collaboration come about and what sort of stuff have you done before?
We are three people doing Schlachthofbronx. One is a drummer in various bands, the other two are dj's. The focal point of our music is that the people have to motherfucking dance and scream! We are not ashamed of using whatever style it takes to get them to this point, be it dancehall, polka, bavarian or hungarian folk music, dubstep, uk funky, hiphop, electro, booty bass, ghettotek or whatever. One could say the Schlachthofbronx sound is like a massive rhinoceros driving around in an autoscooter, heavily drunk.
Does the name Schlachthofbronx refer to a particular part of Munich? Is that where you live?
Yes, 'schlachthof' refers to the big meat fabric in our neighboorhood and 'bronx' represents our aim to create something like a block party kind of atmosphere where the dancers interact with the dj's to get the party cooking. Other parts of Munich are nicknamed Schwarlem, Fürstenfeldbrooklyn, South Sendling and Giesing Heights.
Could you illustrate with an anecdote how ghetto your neighbourhood actually is?
One of us lives above a christian sect. Their plastic altar is wall to wall to the dancefloor of what we call a tabledance bar. The owner wears old FC Bayern trainers. On the other side of the street there's a former public bath where leftwing anarchist youths organize punk concerts every other day. Not really ghetto, but we love it.
What got you into bass music? Any favourite artists or records?
Too many to mention. Right now it would be Kingwendu from Tanzania.
PC or Mac?
We choose cd's. We don't wait for a vinyl release if we want to play out a track. And soundwise: we dare you to prove your records sound better than our cd's!
What does the title 'Landergschwister Isatalerghettoschuten' mean? Is it even German?
That's a remix we made for G.Rag und die Landlergschwister, a really good folk group from Bavaria. It is called the 'isartaler ghettoschützen remix' to be precise and yes, that is German. Difficult to translate but basically it's s a parody of the typical names of all these fake make-money-with-cheap-wannabe-traditional-songs kind of bands here in Germany. Isartal is a part of Bavaria and schützen is like shooter... Actually, this track is one of the four tracks on our 'We Run This' ep that will come out soon on UK label On The Brink.
How should the Belgian people prepare themselves for your live show?
Lots of sleep, healthy food, thoughts about nice things... and then come and waste all that in one night, bumping and grinding! Useful items to bring to the party include rave whistles, rave horns (the ones with gas or compressed air are the best), small towels to wave, anything that makes noise really (surprise us)... And if somebody has a confetti gun, that would be great! Ours just broke down the other day and we might not get a new one in time.