UK Garage has always been driven by DJs, systems, and records that work when the lights are low and the bass does the work.. In the current wave of UKG’s resurgence, MPH has emerged as one of the producers consistently delivering tracks that cut through on real dancefloors, not just playlists with him filling out festival tents and clubs weekend after weekend all across the world.
Blending classic garage swing with bassline pressure and a modern sense of space, MPH’s music sits comfortably across garage, house, and bass-led club sets. His tracks are functional without being formulaic, built with DJs in mind and flexible enough to work across warm-ups, peak time, and late-night sessions. You hear them on underground radio, in club mixes, and threaded through sets where energy matters more than hype.
We’ve collated five essential MPH tracks that capture the breadth of his sound so far. From high-energy club records to more vocal-led moments, each one highlights why MPH has become a trusted name among DJs and ravers alike and a key figure in the ongoing evolution of UK Garage.
1. MPH – Raw
Release date: 2025
Label: Black Book Records
Raw is pure club energy. Built around tight percussion, a rolling bassline, and a no-nonsense groove, this track has become one of MPH’s most recognisable records. It hits hardest on proper systems, where the low end has room to breathe, and it has found a natural home in UKG and bassline sets across the country.
What makes Raw stand out is its restraint. Nothing is overcooked, and every element serves the rhythm. It is the kind of track DJs trust when they need to lift a room without changing direction.
2. Calvin Harris – I’m Not Alone (MPH Remix)
Release date: 2025
Label: Sony / Columbia
Taking on I’m Not Alone is a bold move. The original is a defining UK dance record, deeply tied to late-2000s club culture. MPH’s remix avoids nostalgia traps, instead reworking the track with a clean UK Garage swing and modern low-end weight.
The vocal remains instantly recognisable, but the rhythm places it firmly in contemporary UKG sets. This remix has become a crossover moment for MPH, introducing his sound to wider audiences while still earning respect from garage selectors.
3. MPH & Yolanda Be Cool – Tremble (feat. Kim English)
Release date: 2025
Label: Black Book Records
Tremble leans into the more vocal, soulful side of MPH’s sound. The presence of Kim English brings undeniable house heritage, while the rhythm and bass firmly place the track in UKG territory. It is energetic without being aggressive, making it ideal for those moments when a set needs warmth as well as momentum.
This track shows MPH operating confidently in collaborative spaces, adapting his style without losing identity.
4. KH, Four Tet & Nelly Furtado – Only Human (MPH Remix)
Release date: 2026
Label: Text Records under license with Ministry of Sound
Only Human is a standout example of MPH operating at the intersection of underground credibility and global reach. With names like KH, Four Tet, and Nelly Furtado on the original, the pressure on this remix was high, but MPH delivers with a tasteful, understated UK Garage rework.
The remix strips things back rhythmically, allowing the vocal to breathe while introducing a subtle swing and low-end movement that works beautifully in club and radio contexts. It is refined rather than explosive, and that balance is exactly why it lands so well.
5. MPH – One Sixty
Release date: 2024
Label: Night Bass Records
One Sixty is a DJ favourite for a reason. Sitting comfortably at that sweet spot tempo, it is built for mixing and thrives when layered with other records. The groove is infectious, the bassline is playful, and the overall feel taps directly into the heart of modern UK Garage.
It is a track that appears again and again in club recordings and radio shows, often uncredited, simply because it works.
MPH’s growing catalogue reflects where UK Garage is right now. Respectful of its roots, forward-facing in its sound design, and firmly focused on the dancefloor. These five tracks offer a clear entry point into his world and a snapshot of why his music continues to resonate across the scene.



