NERVO Turn Jairic's 'Don't Let Me Put A Track On You' Into a Peak-Time Techno Weapon

NERVO Turn Jairic's 'Don't Let Me Put A Track On You' Into a Peak-Time Techno Weapon

Some songs are made for headphones. Others are made for rooms, big speakers and dancefloors that keep moving until sunrise. NERVOs latest remix is definitely for speakers and dancefloors.

The Grammy-winning Australian sisters have taken Jairics Don't Let Me Put A Track On You and completely changed its energy. They didn't make it simpler though. They made it bigger. Then they turned everything up.

The result is a techno version that swaps quiet beats for loud drums, high synth sounds and a faster pace that practically begs to be played at 2 a.m. When the crowd is fully into it. It's bigger. Bolder. Maybe even a little wild.

What makes the remix work is that it never forgets the song underneath all that power. Jairics voice remains the center giving the track a sense of vulnerability that cuts through the heavy production. That's not always easy to do. Here it works.

NERVO said that the decision to speed things up came naturally after hearing how the record fit into their DJ sets.

"We really liked the original and wanted to make it faster to match what we've been playing in our sets " the duo said. "Its been working well on dancefloors. We can't wait for everyone to hear it."

It's the kind of remix that feels made for festival stages and late-night warehouse sessions balancing melody with enough driving energy to keep a room moving.

The original version first appeared on Jairics 2025 EP n=40, a project that showed the Detroit-born South of France-based producers willingness to mix genres than stay in one. This new collaboration pushes that vision further exposing his music to an even wider electronic audience while giving NERVO another strong club record.

For fans of peak-time techno with melodic substance this one deserves a spot, in the playlist.

Listen to NERVOs remix of Don't Let Me Put A Track On You below.

Next
Next

30 Years Later, Chemical Brothers’ Exit Planet Dust Still Sounds Like It Came From the Future