D.M.S.R (Remixes Part 2)

Back in May, Russ Rich, Andy Allder & Debby Holiday reimagined Prince’s iconic deep cut “D.M.S.R.” (Dance Music Sex Romance) for a new dance generation. Dominating dance floor over this past Pride 2025 season, Rich and Allder’s main and extended mixes stayed true to the funk-forward roots of the original, while they also crafted a peak-time club version and a darker after-hours tech house mix that gives serious “Nasty Girl” energy—seductive, edgy, and unapologetically fun.

Well at last, the much anticipated six “Remix & Dub” remix package #2 of “D.M.S.R.” drops with remixes by Dirty Disco, Nick Bertossi, Brady Prince, Peter Napoli, Henriq Moraes, and Paisley Park alum, Larry Peace.

The Dirty Disco Mailroom Remix & accompanying Dub Remix are peak hour commercial house remixes with pulsating baselines, heavy kicks, and demanding synths. Nick Bertossi’s tech house mix with its rapid fire beats and trumpets creates a Funky House / Tech House genre the dance floor has been waiting for. I dare you not to shake your ass to this mix. Big Room connoisseurs will want to run, not walk, to the Brandy Prince Remix. Mix one part Peter Rauhofer with one part Thunderpuss, and just a sprinkle of Darude and you have the explosive, festival size Brandy Prince Remix. Looking for the essence of the New York Late Night after-hours sound, look no further than the Peter Napoli Remix. With it’s infectious walking baseline, deep Murk-esq keyboard stabs, and playful use of the vocals, The Peter Napoli Remix is a seductive mix of gritty house, big deep beast, and hypnotic tech-house. For those who want a more traditional Tribal Big Room Circuit Remix will want to check out the Henriq Moraes Big Room Mix. A powerhouse solo artist, remix producer, and DJ in the Brazilian Big Room scene, Moraes always delivers his infectious and dynamic production flare, impressive use of chord progression, and just the right use of euphoric synths stabs.  Rounding out the Remix E.P is an actual Paisley Park alum, Larry Peace. Often known for his slightly slower, sexier R&B house remixes and original productions, Peace cranks up the energy to create a peak-time piano house anthem that still has all the charm and warmth of his more classic R&B remixes but with  powerful beats, a driving baseline, plus a classic late 90’s piano hook so indicative of his unmistakeable production style. You’d be hard pressed not to find a version that rocks your dance floor.