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Little Talk with Eshach

Rebecca Besnos
House, Interviews
11 February 2026

On ‘Ada,’ Eshach steps into the spotlight with a debut EP that feels both deeply personal and quietly confident. Blending cinematic atmospheres, hypnotic grooves, and emotive storytelling, the Karakol release introduces a producer shaped by years of behind-the-scenes work in sound design, film composition, and collaboration with artists like Eitan Reiter. From ambient openings to Afro-tinged rhythms and melodic house closers, ‘Ada’ reads like a carefully written first chapter – inviting listeners into a world where club music and narrative coexist. We sat down with Eshach to explore the journey behind the EP, his creative evolution, and what lies ahead.

 

 

WWD: ‘Ada’ is your debut solo EP, but clearly not the work of a newcomer. What made this moment feel like the right time to step forward under your own name?

 

I realized that tracks released into the world teach you more than tracks sitting in a drawer. Learning and exploring sounds is the whole point for me.

 

WWD: The EP feels very cinematic, almost like a short film told in four scenes. Do you think in narratives when you’re writing club music, or does that storytelling emerge later?

 

I think the music is coming out like this because I always try to be an observer, to live life like watching a film from the outside.

 

WWD: ‘Intro (Bingin)’ sets a quiet, emotional tone before the grooves arrive. How important is atmosphere for you when opening a record – or even a DJ set?

 

It wasn’t planned. I wrote this track while I was in Bingin, Indonesia, during a time when I felt love for music. It simply felt right to open the EP with that feeling.

 

WWD: The title track ‘Ada’ balances hypnotic movement with subtle emotion. What were you chasing emotionally when you wrote it? Was it a feeling, a memory, or a place?

 

This time it was a place, Givat Ada. I lived there and one day the land owner told me I needed to get out of the house. I wrote it on the same day.

 

WWD: ‘Am I Here’ leans into afro house rhythms and organic textures. What draws you to percussion-driven music, and how do you keep it feeling soulful rather than functional?

 

 I love to dance, so if I dance in the studio it’s a good sign.

 

WWD: ‘Piantito’ closes the EP on a tender, melodic note. Do you see it as a love track, a farewell, or something more open-ended?

 

I felt love on the day I wrote it. 

 

WWD: You’ve worked extensively on soundtracks for animations and short films. How has composing for visuals shaped the way you approach arrangement and pacing in club music?

 

It happens naturally. Like I said, I try to observe life like a film and don’t take it too heavily, it helps with the “bad days” and that perspective naturally shapes how I build music and listen to it.

 

 

WWD: When translating these cinematic ideas into a club setting, what excites you most about performing your own music live?

 

Seeing something that started just as a feeling in the studio turns into something other people can feel on the dancefloor and gives them the opportunity to explore it together.

 

WWD: ‘Ada’ feels like an introduction rather than a destination. If this EP is chapter one, what kind of journey do you hope listeners are about to step into with you?

 

I don’t know, but the plan is to keep making music and share it. 

 

WWD: Thanks for the chat 🙂

 

The ‘Ada’ EP is available here

Related

Bruno Roth

Little Talk with Bruno Roth

Slxm Sol

Little Talk with SIxm Sol

Federico Scavo

Little Talk with Federico Scavo

Claxy

Little Talk with Claxy

MSystem & Toxo

Little Talk with Msystem & Toxo

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