Luis Pitti is a Spanish DJ and producer linked to the underground electronic continuum, with a catalogue that moves between breakbeat, oldskool, hardcore breaks, house and tech house. Within the breakbeat field, he is especially associated with contemporary productions that keep a clear line back to rave-era vocabulary.
In Optimal Breaks’ weekly chart «40 Breaks Vitales», he appears with the track «Toxic Steps», a placement that situates him within the active circuit of present-day breakbeat producers rather than as a purely retrospective name. His music sits in a space where breakbeat remains tied to bass pressure, dancefloor function and a recognisable electronic edge.
Beyond chart visibility, Luis Pitti has built a broader producer profile through releases circulating on specialist platforms such as Beatport, Bandcamp, SoundCloud, Discogs and Traxsource. Across those channels, titles including «Subterranean», «Toxic Steps», «Fractured Rhythm», «Liquid Motion», «The Time», «Auralis» and «Isla Arriba» sketch a catalogue that combines rhythmic drive with a taste for atmosphere and club utility.
A central part of his identity is his connection to ExperimentalBass Records, one of the labels he is associated with as founder. That platform helps frame his work not only as an artist project but also as part of a self-directed infrastructure around breakbeat, hardcore-rooted sounds and bass music.
The ExperimentalBass orbit is especially relevant in understanding the oldskool dimension of his sound. Releases in the «Oldskool Series» foreground hardcore references, piano stabs, forceful drum loops, synthesizer lines and 1990s rave vocabulary, translating those elements into a contemporary production setting.
Within that strand, «Oldskool Series Vol 2» was framed around oldskool hardcore aesthetics, while later entries such as «Oldskool Series Vol 3», «Oldskool Series Vol 5» and «Oldskool Series Vol. 6» reinforce the sense of an ongoing body of work rather than a one-off stylistic gesture.
«Oldskool Series Vol. 6» is one of the clearest examples of that approach: a four-track release oriented toward oldskool and hardcore breaks, issued as a limited 12-inch vinyl edition. That format choice underlines his connection to classic breakbeat culture as much as to current digital circulation.
His profile also connects with a wider network of labels and platforms. Alongside ExperimentalBass Records, he has been linked to projects such as Suma Records and WhoBear Records, and his wider discography also appears in association with names including ExperimentalTech Records, Under Station Records, Oxygen House Music and Housepital Records.
That broader label activity helps explain the range of his catalogue. Luis Pitti is not confined to a single genre lane: alongside breakbeat and oldskool material, releases such as «La Vida 2.0», «One Year of Music By Luis Pitti», «Misuri» and «Pasión Latina» point to parallel work in house and tech house contexts.
Stylistically, his work suggests a producer comfortable moving between direct dancefloor material and more textured electronic pieces. The contrast between a title like «Toxic Steps» and more evocative names such as «Sea Breath Ritual» or «Balearic Silence» hints at a range extending from peak-time breaks to moodier, more spatial constructions.
His activity also reflects a scene logic in which production, label work and online circulation are closely linked. Bandcamp, SoundCloud, Beatport and specialist download stores form part of the contemporary route through which this kind of breakbeat output reaches DJs and listeners.
In that sense, Luis Pitti belongs to a generation of artists keeping breakbeat active through steady release work, label-building and a continued dialogue with rave memory. Rather than treating oldskool references as nostalgia alone, his catalogue folds them into present-tense club music.
Within the broader map of Spanish breaks and bass music, he stands as a current artist whose work connects modern production values with the enduring pull of hardcore, rave and breakbeat foundations, while also maintaining a wider footprint across underground electronic club forms.