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mixmag netherlands


“I never wanted to wait for someone else to approve my ideas. Releasinzg music on my own feels natural, because it keeps everything honest and connected to who I am.”


Toffler defined his earliest club


experiences. Inside that narrow, iconic tunnel, he began to understand how tension and release play with each other. The room is small but electric, and every shift in the mix sends a reaction through the crowd.


“Toffler was the moment where I realised that every shift from the DJ has an instant effect on the crowd.”


Maassilo expanded that education. Its industrial weight and massive scale taught him how intensity behaves when it fills a cavernous space. In Maassilo, even silence ecomes loud. Even small moments feel important. Standing in the middle of that room, he understood that techno is not just about power. It is about control, timing, and the invisible line between chaos and precision.


Before he stepped onto any center stage, he was behind them. During his internship at Rotterdam Rave, he learned the mechanics of a night from the inside, fixing cables, hanging smoke machines, and solving problems quietly while the room waited outside.


“During my internship at Rotterdam Rave I got to see every part of a rave from the inside. It gave me a real understanding of what it takes to build a good night, and what a proper rave really needs. I learned more from working on those nights than from anything else in my early career.”


The city shaped something else in him, too. A sense of responsibility. A belief that the people behind the scenes are as important as the ones onstage. Being part of a team changed how he sees nightlife. It taught him humility, discipline, and respect for everyone who contributes to a night.


Today, his studio sits in the same building as Speedy J, Benny Rodrigues, and David Vunk. Names that helped define the sound. For Lammer, this is not an aesthetic detail. It is a daily reminder of the legacy he stands next to.


“Being around those names every day keeps me focused because they shaped the city I come from.”


He travels more now. Plays in new cities and new countries. But he carries Rotterdam with him into every booth. The pace of the city is in his hands. The rawness is in his instinct. The clarity is in his choices.


A MOMENT EVERYTHING


THAT SHIFTED


In every artist’s life, there is a moment that changes direction. For Lammer, it happened at Modular inside Maas- silo. He was not there as a raver. He was working. Focused on logistics and timing. But something unexpected caught him.


It was the first time he saw Job Jobse play. Near the end of his set, Jobse dropped a few old Tiesto classics. Not as a gimmick or a joke. With intention.


“Hearing those 90/00’s trance classics in the middle of a serious underground night changed me. It showed me that emotion, fun and real rave energy can live together moment.”


without breaking the


024


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