Funk & Disorderly release "Kirk" on Circuit Grooves
- 1 day ago
- 2 min read

Circuit Grooves returns with Kirk EP, the latest release from Funk & Disorderly, out now from Friday, March 6, 2026. Across six tracks, the EP moves through a tightly focused world of low-end pressure, fractured rhythm and late-night atmosphere, pairing four original cuts with remixes from Slow Assembly and ZOiD. Built with patience and precision, Kirk EP feels like a release designed for heads who like their club music stripped back, physical and full of tension rather than excess. It is a compact but characterful statement from both artist and label.
Sonically, the EP draws clear inspiration from the deep post-dubstep pulse of the early 2010s, but twists that template with a sly and slightly off-centre jazz sensibility. “Kirk” opens with solid momentum and a sense of spacious control, while “Zoomies” introduces a twitchier, more playful rhythmic energy. From there, the record leans further into smoky, after-hours territory, balancing tense melodic fragments with sub weight and sharp, economical drums. The result is music that feels lean but never empty, with each element placed for maximum impact. On remix duty, Slow Assembly takes “Zoomies” into more broken terrain, stretching the groove into a slower-burning, funkier framework, while ZOiD reshapes “Roche Limit” into something sharper, stranger and even more skeletal.
Funk & Disorderly clearly understand the appeal of restraint. Rather than flooding these tracks with ideas, they let space, bass and mood do the heavy lifting. That gives the EP a confident sense of identity and places it firmly within a lineage of underground, system-minded dance music.
With Kirk EP, Funk & Disorderly deliver a dark, supple and deeply functional release that rewards close listening as much as club play. Dive in now and catch Circuit Grooves in seriously fine form.
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