SPACE PIZZA Records is a Spanish breakbeat label associated with the contemporary Iberian breaks circuit. In the available public profiles it is presented as a label run by Shade K and Terrie Kynd, with a catalogue oriented toward club-focused breakbeat and adjacent bass sounds.
Its identity sits within a strand of Spanish breakbeat that remained active in the digital era, after the peak years of the national scene. Rather than operating as a historical vinyl institution from the 1990s or early 2000s, SPACE PIZZA Records is better understood as a newer platform for producers working in a modern breaks framework shaped by online distribution, DJ charts and specialist download stores.
The label's public footprint points to Spain as its base and to Beatport and SoundCloud as key outlets. That places it in the ecosystem of independent labels that helped keep breakbeat circulating through digital singles and EPs, especially for DJs following the breaks / breakbeat / UK bass categories rather than older format-driven record shop culture.
Musically, the catalogue is associated with punchy, dancefloor-minded breakbeat: crisp drum programming, bass pressure, rave-derived hooks and a production style aimed at contemporary club play. The emphasis appears to be on direct functionality for DJs, while still drawing from the long Spanish taste for melodic leads, vocal touches and high-energy arrangements.
Shade K and Terrie Kynd are the clearest artist names tied to the label's identity, not only as operators but also as part of its creative core. The surrounding catalogue also points to artists such as Playbass, Evil Crew, The Broken Rhythm and Tazmania, suggesting a network of producers moving within the same breaks orbit.
Among the releases visible in public storefronts are titles such as "Wrap," credited to Shade K, Playbass and Evil Crew, "Shiva" by The Broken Rhythm, and "Everybody Knows" by Tazmania. These titles indicate a release strategy centered on individual digital tracks and singles rather than large-format album campaigns.
Within the wider breakbeat map, SPACE PIZZA Records belongs to the post-2010 phase in which Spanish labels continued to reinterpret local breaks traditions alongside newer bass influences. Its positioning near the breaks / breakbeat / UK bass tag suggests a catalogue that can sit comfortably between classic Spanish breakbeat energy and a broader contemporary bass-music vocabulary.
That role matters in scene terms. Labels of this scale often function less as mass-market brands than as connective tissue between producers, DJs and niche audiences. They provide a regular outlet for tracks, remixes and collaborations, and help maintain visibility for a style that survives through committed communities rather than mainstream infrastructure.
The available evidence also suggests an active social-media presence and an open channel for demos, which is typical of independent digital labels working close to their scene. That kind of accessibility reinforces the sense of SPACE PIZZA Records as a practical platform for ongoing breakbeat circulation rather than a purely archival imprint.
In the context of Optimal Breaks, SPACE PIZZA Records is notable as part of the modern Spanish breaks continuum: a label tied to artist-led curation, digital release culture and the persistence of breakbeat as a living club language in Spain.