Saoirse has crafted a career that traverses sonic worlds and subcultures. The DJ, producer,
trUst label boss and Body Movements festival founder now flexes her creative muscles
further.
Saoirse’s electronic allegiance was forged in Ireland; trailing after her mother to free parties,
she cultivated her obsession with Leftfield, Prodigy and Orbital. She cut her path with a by-
the-bootstraps spirit: as a teenager, her days were spent on local pirate radio and hustling
for sets in Ireland’s hard house and trance spaces, working in renowned record store Abbey
Discs, and doing Ibiza seasonal work. She began building a globe-trotting vinyl collection
and her tastes expanded into realms of house and techno.
A fabric dancefloor epiphany during a Villalobos set inspired her to pursue a music career
seriously. She secured a job at Resident Advisor age 23, and began playing across London
at Phonox, fabric, and FOLD, while securing international slots and festivals like Sonar,
Horst, and Love International.
“I like to take risks,” she says, “and respond to the crowd – I want to move fluidly from what’s
wacky, ravey, headsy.” Saoirse’s DJ sets are reverently researched yet unbridled by rules. A
cavernous record bag oscillates from dark room chuggers to bubbling bass, garage, jungle,
euphoric house. She is a resident of Barcelona’s queer party Maricas, and maintains her
party trUst, which has hosted Spekki Webbu, Nicolas Lutz and Eris Drew. She curated a
fabric night with Shanti Celeste, and queer electronic festival Body Movements, now in its
third year, consistently sells out. Radio is a defining space: she was the first house-focused
resident show at RINSE, and her RA mix, Radio 1 residency and Essential Mix carved out
ambitious soundscapes that would become elemental references for the scene.
trUst Recordings is about deeply trusting her collaborators and tracks that get heads down.
“A club tool comes naturally to me,” Saorse says. Two EPs, trUst 001 and Two Bruised
Egos, are the natural progression from DJ to producer, articulating the rave’s frissons with
rich textures and experimental vocal samples. Her fabric presents compilation is a pivotal
achievement: “I want it to feel timeless, so I leaned into the textures I know from within those
club walls. This is where music truly influenced my life, where I learned to be a good raver
and where the longevity of the dancefloor hit home.”
Two decades in, Saoirse’s dancefloors are only ever-expanding.
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