German producer Montee has carved out a specific lane — tracks that hit on the dancefloor but refuse to leave their emotional baggage at the door..
On the surface, it's a house and UK garage cut built for movement: that familiar swung, syncopated pulse, propulsive and immediate, the kind of rhythm that does exactly what it needs to do in a club at 1am. But sit with the track a little longer and the tension underneath becomes impossible to ignore. Montee has described "High On You" as a meditation on emotional dependence — the pull between walking away from someone and going back, the strange comfort of intensity over emptiness. That's heavy subject matter for a dancefloor record, and the fact that it works at all is a credit to how carefully the production holds both things at once.
There's real candour here too. Montee connects the track to his own experience with sobriety, to that specific liminal discomfort where silence becomes louder than chaos and stillness has to be sat with rather than escaped. You don't need that context to feel the track's undertow, but it deepens it considerably once you know.
Production-wise, "High On You" is sharp and considered — melodic elements that ache with longing layered over rhythm that never lets up, friction and groove existing in the same breath. It's club music that doesn't ask you to switch your feelings off, which is rarer than it should be.