EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
EARMILK EARMILK
EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Dance
  • Electronic
  • Feature
  • Interviews
  • Mainstage
  • Tech House

Madam Lola steps into her power on 'Domination Frequency' EP [Interview]

  • February 24, 2026
  • Kassam
Total
0
Shares
0
0

Vancouver’s underground has never been short of artists who can truly move a room. But Madam Lola has always approached the booth differently.

For Madam Lola, the dance floor isn’t just a stage; it’s a living, breathing organism—a charged space where tension builds, bodies loosen, and something unspoken passes between strangers under low light and heavy bass.

With Lola's debut EP Domination Frequency, the Vancouver-based producer and multidisciplinary artist captures that exchange for the first time in original form, distilling years of shaping rooms across continents into two dark, intentional club weapons.

Raised between cultures and now performing internationally, Lola’s artistic identity is rooted in duality: East and West, sacred and wild, light and shadow.

Her sets glide across indie dance, tech house, Afro rhythms, downtempo passages, and harder techno moments without settling into one lane. But her most recent EP leans into something more focused and more intense.

“I’ve always experienced the dance floor as a living energy rather than an audience,” she explains. “There’s a constant exchange — tension building, release, connection, movement. When I created Domination Frequency, I approached the music the same way. I didn’t follow traditional song structures or think about where drops should happen. Instead, I built the tracks in waves.”

That instinct-first process led the EP somewhere darker than she initially planned. Rather than chasing predictable peaks, Lola let the sound evolve naturally, allowing space for mood and atmosphere to lead. The result feels less like two standalone tracks and more like a ritual unfolding in real time. “Whatever Lola Wants” opens with restraint. Its groove is sharp and teasing, tension stretched tight before it ever breaks. There’s a cinematic edge to it as a nod to the hypnotic, sweat-drenched intensity of the iconic dance scene in The Matrix Reloaded, but filtered through Lola’s femme-forward perspective. Playful affirmation meets industrial pulse, balancing seduction with control.

“Who’s the Master” flips the dynamic. Heavier and more forceful, the track leans into bold vocals and driving techno tension. It evolved from a performance concept into something more commanding and a darker soundscape built for the exact moment when a room locks in and stops holding back. Together, the tracks feel like a conversation between control and surrender.

“Domination isn’t about power over others,” Lola says. “It’s about the balance between control and surrender. On the dance floor, music leads the journey, but people choose to let go and follow it. That exchange is what creates magic.” That push-and-pull has defined her career behind the decks. Having shared stages with artists like Eric Prydz, John Summit, and ARTBAT, Lola has spent years translating other artists’ records into communal experiences. But over time, something shifted.

“DJing taught me how to read and shape energy,” she says. “But for a long time, I was translating other artists’ work. Through building my own experiences — like Harem and Funhouse — I found my voice. This EP felt like a natural evolution of that journey.”

Those experiences have become central to her creative world. Harem: East Meets West blends spiritual gathering with sensual movement, creating a culturally rooted ritual space. Funhouse, by contrast, leans into playful chaos, raw, liberating, and unapologetically sexual. Both are extensions of Lola’s belief that music is about atmosphere as much as sound.

“They taught me that what people remember isn’t just the track,” she says. “It’s how the room felt.”

Movement is non-negotiable in her process. She tests her productions physically, dancing alone in the studio to gauge how bass travels through the body, how tension tightens in the chest before release.

If it doesn’t create a physical response, it doesn’t make the cut. “Sound should be felt as much as heard,” she adds. “This EP was designed for motion.” That physicality underscores the project’s deeper intention. The EP is a glimpse into Lola’s darker, more mysterious alter ego. Confident. Sensual. In control.

“I exist in contrast,” she says. “This EP represents my femme fatale side — powerful, instinctual, unapologetic. I’m naturally dominant in my creative energy, and that presence is embedded in these tracks.”

For an artist who has long treated the booth as sacred ground, stepping into production could have diluted the mystique. Instead, Domination Frequency sharpens it. It captures the slow burn of her sets.

Listen to her full EP out now on all major streaming platforms.

Connect with Madam Lola: Instagram | YouTube | Website

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Share 0
Related Topics
  • DJ
  • Domination Frequency
  • EP
  • Madam Lola
Kassam

Previous Article
  • Rock

Southside Café reach new heights on “Like Sparks From the Sun”

  • February 24, 2026
  • Nate
View Article
Next Article
  • Jazz
  • Jazz Fusion
  • Mainstage
  • New Music

Returning to music, Mitch Allen release jazz infused single "Love That For You"

  • February 25, 2026
  • Donovan Wilkins
View Article
You May Also Like
View Article
  • Dance
  • Electronic
  • Music Videos
  • Pop

Zorza enters debut album era with new single and video for "Haunted"

  • July 10, 2026
Arky Waters
View Article
  • Dance Bass

Arky Waters shares raw, visceral bass music project "Holdin On"

  • July 10, 2026
View Article
  • Electronic
  • Electronic
  • Experimental
  • Folk
  • Mainstage
  • New Music

Loma Suyo’s “Colibri” drifts between fragility and force in a spellbinding sonic journey

  • July 10, 2026
Everything But The Everything
View Article
  • Feature
  • Mainstage
  • Pop
  • Rock

Everything But The Everything delivers emotional depth and fresh energy on new single "Hollow Heart"

  • July 10, 2026
View Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Country
  • Feature
  • Folk
  • Mainstage
  • Rock

Tsubasa Lucid explores loss, belonging, and transformation through the new album "Leave Her to Heaven, Leave Him to London"

  • July 10, 2026
Sebastian Rydgren
View Article
  • Feature
  • Mainstage
  • Pop

Sebastian Rydgren explores love, loss, and openess in his new EP "Midnight Confessions Pt. 1"

  • July 10, 2026
D.O.S.E sound
View Article
  • Feature
  • Mainstage
  • Pop

D.O.S.E sound delivers an emotional journey of memory and loneliness with "Forget Me"

  • July 10, 2026
Aurelia
View Article
  • Feature
  • Mainstage
  • Pop

Aurelia captures the beauty of change with new release "sometimes i wish"

  • July 10, 2026
Popular Music
  • MaYeN blends introspection and ambition on 'Nothing To Prove'
    • July 10, 2026
  • Deakxn pairs immersive production with bold lyricism on 'One-8hunnid-Crank'
    • July 10, 2026
  • Island rhythms meet California vibes: Beenie Man and Snoop Dogg are joined by top artists on “For You”
    • July 10, 2026
  • Bijou Belle shares swoon-tastic alt pop anthem "Blind Crush"
    • July 10, 2026
  • Zorza enters debut album era with new single and video for "Haunted"
    • July 10, 2026
Recent Scoops
  • Multi-national record label Cheerful Music appears at AI Summit London panel
    • July 7, 2026
  • Amanati blends sound and style with immersive ease
    • May 30, 2026
  • YVNGBRYYY channels honesty, faith and spirituality into his genre-fluid soundscapes
    • April 2, 2026
  • Rising YouTube talent bigboyz is turning viral streams into hit records
    • March 23, 2026
Community Voices
  • From Machismo To Mujeres: Women As The Face Of Reggaeton
    • July 14, 2022
  • Tyler the creator
    4 things I learned on the 'Call Me If You Get Lost' tour
    • March 31, 2022
  • 4 things every artist needs to think about in 2022
    • January 27, 2022
  • The TikTok Takeover of Hip-Hop
    • January 11, 2022

EARMILK EARMILK
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
All Milk. No Duds.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.