UFO Project is a Spanish electronic duo associated with the modern crossover zone between breakbeat, UK garage, drum & bass and bass-heavy rave music.
Built as a collaborative project by Rubén García and Rubén Pachón, the act has developed a profile that moves comfortably between club functionality and a broader festival-facing sound.
Their identity sits in a lineage familiar to listeners of Iberian breaks culture while also drawing from UK-rooted forms. That combination gives the project a flexible vocabulary: broken-beat pressure, garage swing, rave stabs and low-end weight all play a role in their catalogue.
In their early rise they became known within breakbeat circuits, a context that helps explain the directness and impact of their productions. Even when the duo moves toward bass music hybrids, the rhythmic emphasis remains central.
Over time, UFO Project expanded that base into a wider electronic frame rather than staying tied to a single scene code. Their material is often described through a mix of breakbeat, UK garage and drum & bass references, with an approach aimed at peak-time energy.
The project has also maintained a visible DJ dimension alongside production. That side of their activity reinforces the sense of UFO Project as a club-led act shaped by selection, momentum and sound-system response as much as by studio craft.
Their presence on platforms such as SoundCloud and Bandcamp reflects that dual identity: part producer project, part DJ vehicle, with a repertoire designed to travel across adjacent bass scenes.
A further point of visibility has come through radio. UFO Project has been associated with a weekly show on Insomniac Radio, extending their reach beyond local scenes and placing their sound within a broader contemporary bass network.
Rather than presenting a purist reading of any one style, the duo works in the overlap between traditions. Breaks, garage shuffle, rave tension and drum & bass drive are treated as compatible tools rather than separate lanes.
That synthesis helps explain their appeal to audiences moving between breakbeat heritage and newer bass-music ecosystems. UFO Project belongs to a generation of artists for whom genre borders are porous but DJ impact remains the test.
In that sense, their role is less about revivalism than about continuity: carrying break-led energy into newer contexts while keeping one foot in the pressure, pace and physicality that made those scenes durable in the first place.
Within the wider map of contemporary Spanish electronic music, UFO Project stands as a duo linked to the ongoing conversation between local breaks culture and international bass forms.