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Purple Disco Machine Feat. Eyelar - Dopamine (12") - 45RPM

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$35.00
Condition:
New
Availability:
Available At Supplier. Ships in 1 - 2 weeks
Current Stock:
Genre(s):
Electronic, House
Format:
Vinyl Record 12in
Label:
Sweat It Out!
$35.00

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Purple Disco Machine Feat. Eyelar - Dopamine Vinyl Record Album Art
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Album Info

Artist: Purple Disco Machine Feat. Eyelar
Album: Dopamine
Released: Australia, 2021

Tracklist:

ADopamine (Original)7:01
BDopamine (Club Dub)7:42


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Description

Purple Disco Machine has a knack for turning retro polish into something you actually want to dance to right now, not just admire like a museum piece. Dopamine, his 2021 single with Eyelar, nails that sweet spot. It landed in late August as a teaser for Exotica, the second Purple Disco Machine album that arrived in October the same year, and it still hits with the same sunlit jolt. You can feel the intent straight away. This is nu‑disco engineered for big rooms and lazy Saturday afternoons alike, a blend of Italo sparkle and modern punch that sticks in your head for days.

The groove is pure PDM. A rubbery bassline glides under clipped rhythm guitar and glossy synths that flicker like neon. Everything breathes. He gives the percussion room to sparkle, then lets the kick push the whole thing forward without ever getting aggressive. It is the kind of production where you can pick out each element if you want, yet it all locks together like a perfect little engine. The hooks arrive in waves. First the wordless vocal teases, then the full chorus blooms with those earworm intervals that feel familiar in the best way.

Eyelar is the secret weapon. The Dutch‑born, London‑based singer threads a line between cool poise and urgent pull, which suits the theme. The lyric circles that heady thrill you chase when the night opens up and everything feels possible. There is a little ache in there too, like she knows the comedown is baked into the deal. Her phrasing is razor clean, and the topline is built for festival sing‑alongs without blunting the mood. You can almost see the hands in the air when the chorus hits and the hi‑hats start to tick a little harder.

In the context of Exotica, Dopamine makes even more sense. Purple Disco Machine had already set the scene with Hypnotized, his breakout collab with Sophie and the Giants, and Fireworks with Moss Kena and The Knocks. Those singles sketched an 80s‑tinted world of synth flickers, glossy pads and nimble bass. Dopamine slots into that palette and brightens it, a pop‑leaning peak that ties the album’s retro heart to its club roots. Exotica arrived in October 2021 and felt like a celebration of the scenes that shaped him, from Italo disco to French touch. This track might be the moment where the celebration turns fully communal.

What makes it stick is the detail. Little guitar chanks that answer the vocal. A synth line that mirrors the melody a bar later, like an echo of a memory. The breakdown pulls just enough energy to set up the final lift, then the bass returns with extra glide. None of it feels cheap. Purple Disco Machine, the Dresden‑born producer also known as Tino Piontek, has always been a student of arrangement. He knows when to hold tension and when to release it, which is why Dopamine still works long after its first run on radio and in clubs.

If you live with dance records, you will want this on wax. The low end is warm and the percussion has that crisp edge that vinyl loves. Exotica pressed up nicely, and if you are hunting for Purple Disco Machine vinyl, this era delivers the goods. There are copies floating around with tidy mastering and artwork that pops. If you spot Dopamine vinyl or a 12‑inch with remixes, grab it. It is the kind of single that turns a living room into a lounge. For collectors, it also rounds out a run of Purple Disco Machine albums on vinyl that showcase just how well his tracks open up on a turntable.

I have found it easy to point friends toward this song when they want a modern gateway into disco. It is welcoming, it is polished, and it sneaks a little melancholy into the shimmer. If you prefer online hunting, you can buy Purple Disco Machine records online without much trouble, and there are plenty of options across vinyl records Australia. I have even seen copies pop up at my local Melbourne record store between vintage house 12s and sleek new edits. However you find it, Dopamine feels like a keeper. It is not just a streaming‑era sugar hit. It is a smart, tactile bit of dance pop that earns its space on the shelf and in the crate.

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