Released toward the end of the year, “Reunite” arrives as the kind of project that doesn’t need to shout to get attention. The hook is simple: a vocal that lands instantly. Ren Ocean delivers a performance that feels close-up and human—less “topline” and more confession—while Vanetty frames it with the kind of production restraint that lets emotion do the heavy lifting. And that’s exactly why the record travelled fast: the vocal didn’t just sound good, it made DJs want to touch it.
“Reunite” is officially presented as a 3-track EP designed to work across listening contexts without diluting its identity. There’s an Acoustic version (guitar and voice) that strips everything back to the core of the song, an Afro House version that gives the vocal a warm, organic pulse, and an Extended Afro House version built for DJs—longer, more progressive, and shaped for clean mixing and tension-building.
Listen to the EP: https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/album/2pW10NjS1lbRB0JWrQ3xSV
Reunite (Vanetty): https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/3FvaxqRdHNV61nF94GS0ZA

When a Vocal Connects, Remixes Become Inevitable
The story didn’t stop with the EP. The vocal resonated widely, and multiple DJs wanted to reinterpret it in their own language. Instead of letting the track circulate through unofficial edits, Vanetty leaned into the momentum and released two official remixes, each representing a distinct club philosophy: one progressive and dreamy, built for late-night hypnosis; the other tech house and high-energy, engineered for peak-time impact.

Alex Lowen Remix: Progressive, Dreamy, and Cinematic
Alex Lowen’s remix shifts “Reunite” into a more progressive, melodic lane—dreamy, hypnotic, and elegantly paced. It’s the kind of version that doesn’t rush the payoff; it builds it. The atmosphere opens wider, the emotion stretches longer, and the result can evoke the same sense of melodic grandeur you’d associate with an Adriatique-style anthem: refined tension, cinematic movement, and a vocal that remains the emotional compass.
Lowen’s background explains the precision. Monaco-born, he has spent over a decade performing across Europe, the USA, and the Middle East, earning a reputation for versatility and detail. Currently holding a residency at Sirene by Gaia in Dubai, he brings his signature blend of deep, afro, and tech house to some of the region’s most exclusive stages. His recent releases—such as “Hold On – B Side” with Demaya and “El Pescador” with Filipide—reflect a polished sound with global reach. From sharing the decks with Hugel to studio collaborations with Mark Knight or Moojo, and even sessions alongside Coldplay at Dubai Firdaus Studio, Lowen’s path bridges underground sensibility and mainstream-level execution. On “Reunite,” he doesn’t overwrite the original—he amplifies its emotional voltage through a progressive, dreamy lens.
Reunite (Alex Lowen Remix): https://open.spotify.com/track/655p2xbHKnqmyiIr7ts0Ec

SINHEDA Remix: Tech House, High Energy, Built for the Floor
Where Lowen stretches the emotion, SINHEDA flips the switch. His version is tech house, high energy, and unambiguously dancefloor-driven. The vocal becomes a club anchor—a repeatable hook that resets tension and pulls the crowd back in at exactly the right moments. This remix isn’t about atmosphere first; it’s about impact, the kind you feel in your chest before you even think about it.
Based in Dubai, Swiss artist SINHEDA has been steadily building momentum as both a producer and DJ, known for crafting organic, groove-led house infused with afro house influences. With the release of “Ibe Sala” on Wired, a top afro house label, he solidified his position with support from names like Enzo Siffredi, Alex Wann, Pablo Fierro, Eran Hersh, and Mont Rouge. His “Reunite” remix follows the same blueprint: forward motion, tight groove, and a vocal treated like a weapon—sharp, memorable, and perfectly timed.
Reunite (SINHEDA Remix): https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/2AKny79d0dibphYZK8P0z7

Vanetty: An Afro House Artist with Global Reach—and a Clear Signature
At the center of the project is Vanetty, an afro house producer & DJ whose catalog has landed on renowned labels such as Armada, Deep Root Records, and Nervous Records. More recently, he released “Ethnica” with Nico de Andrea, a breakout afro house anthem with 24 million streams to date. The track ranked as the 4th most played in the 1001Tracklists Afro/Deep House chart, reached #3 on Beatport’s Afro-House chart for three consecutive months, and entered the Top 50 of Beatport’s overall chart.
Vanetty has performed across all continents, including landmark appearances at The Palace of Versailles, Paris’ most iconic locations, and in front of the Eiffel Tower during the celebration of the French presidential election. That unique show was broadcast on TV and reportedly reached 26 million viewers worldwide. His music has also been played and supported by some of the most recognized names in the scene, including Pete Tong (BBC Radio 1), Black Coffee, Blond:ish, Diplo, Claptone, Bob Sinclar, Themba, and Hugel.
A Project That Proves the Song Is Strong Enough to Travel
What makes “Reunite” work is not the number of versions—it’s the consistency of its emotional center. The 3-track EP gives the record three official identities—Acoustic intimacy, Afro House warmth, and Extended DJ utility—while the remixes expand its reach into two distinct corners of the club world. Through every transformation, Ren Ocean’s vocal stays in front, and Vanetty’s production keeps the tone coherent.
In other words: “Reunite” doesn’t just exist in multiple versions. It translates, without losing its meaning.
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