
Max Hefele presents Call Me [MYR]
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There is something refreshingly uncomplicated about Max Hefele’s Call Me EP. Instead of chasing oversized festival climaxes or cinematic spectacle, the producer focuses on the essential relationship between rhythm, melody and movement. The result is a four-track release that quietly earns its emotional weight.
The title cut captures this balance perfectly. “Call Me” channels classic house through crisp percussion and infectious bass movement, while polished production places it firmly within today’s melodic landscape. “Better Day of Life” expands the record’s emotional vocabulary, weaving optimistic harmonies into a groove that remains dancefloor-focused without sacrificing warmth.
“Rabbit in the Cage” slows the narrative into deeper territory. Layers emerge gradually, creating subtle shifts that reward attentive listening as much as club play. Rather than relying on dramatic breakdowns, Hefele embraces restraint, allowing tension to accumulate organically. That patient approach makes the closing “Storm and Struggle” particularly effective, arriving with confident rhythmic momentum and expressive melodic phrasing.
Across the EP, MYR Records once again demonstrates its preference for artists who value longevity over trends. Hefele understands that the strongest club records often reveal themselves over repeated listens, each rotation exposing new harmonic details beneath their immediate functionality.
Call Me EP is rooted in house tradition without becoming nostalgic, while embracing melodic techno without falling into predictable formulas. It is a confident debut for MYR Records that succeeds through careful craftsmanship, tasteful production and a genuine appreciation for electronic music’s evolving history.

