Greve The Globe remixes Linnea Sigurdson’s ‘Clair de Lune’ into jungle cut with breakbeat drive
- Mar 16
- 1 min read

This isn’t a subtle remix. It flips the source material on its head.
Greve The Globe takes the vocal layers from Linnea Sigurdson’s take on ‘Clair de Lune’ and rebuilds them into something built for movement. The result lands firmly in jungle territory, driven by sharp breakbeats and a heavy low end that carries real weight.
The drums set the tone. Fast, tight and relentless, they push the track forward without giving it much room to settle. It’s a clear shift from the original’s atmosphere into something more physical.
What makes it stick is how the vocals are handled.
Rather than sitting on top, they’re pulled into the rhythm. Chopped, stretched and repositioned, they become part of the groove itself. They still carry that airy, almost classical feel, but now they move with the drums instead of floating above them.
That contrast does the work. The track holds onto its original character while operating in a completely different space.
There’s no overcomplication in the arrangement. It’s direct, focused and built around impact. Every element feels placed to keep the energy moving.
We’ve found this one works when you want to shift a set into something more unexpected. It breaks the flow in a good way, pulling attention back onto the system.
Greve The Globe doesn’t just remix the track. He retools it for a different environment.



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