Similar Artists to Clouds
If you follow Clouds, these are the artists Electrobuzz listeners also track — connected through shared labels, overlapping genres, and actual collaborations across 26 releases. Top connections include Slam, Tommy Holohan, Perc. These aren't generic recommendations — every link is computed from real release data in the Electrobuzz archive.
Clouds is a Scottish electronic duo from Perth, formed in 2010. The group produces peak time and driving techno with releases on Electric Deluxe, Perc Trax, and Turbo Recordings since 2012.
Artists Similar to Clouds
Slam
Slam is a Glasgow-based duo consisting of Stuart McMillan and Orde Meikle, who co-founded Soma Records in 1991. They produce driving techno and tech house, releasing primarily on their own Soma imprint alongside select appearances on FIGURE.
Connection: 1 shared label, 9 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Tommy Holohan
Tommy Holohan produces peak time techno and main floor trance across multiple electronic genres since 2019. His driving productions appear on Haven Records and Steel City Dance Discs, spanning from dance pop to hardcore across six releases.
Connection: 1 shared label, 5 shared genres, 2 collaborations
Perc
London-based producer Alistair Wells operates as Perc, founding Perc Trax in 2004 as his primary outlet. His output spans driving techno and hard techno across labels including Stroboscopic Artefacts, Void+1 Recordings, and South London Analogue Material.
Connection: 1 shared label, 8 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Tham
Andreas Thamsen produces hard techno and peak-time driving techno from Berlin, Germany, co-founding Synoid events alongside Acierate. His releases appear on Perc Trax, Off Recordings, and Sacred Court, spanning from aggressive industrial-influenced tracks to Afro house variations since 2019.
Connection: 1 shared label, 7 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Moon Boots
Moon Boots is Peter Dougherty, a house and nu-disco producer from Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. He releases deep house and melodic techno across labels including Anjunadeep, Sweat it Out!, Future Disco, and Kitsune Musique.
Connection: 1 shared label, 7 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Malou
Malou is German singer-songwriter Malou Beling from Hamburg. Her melodic house and techno productions appear on Anjunadeep, Anjunabeats, and Insomniac Records, spanning genres from Afro house to indie dance.
Connection: 1 shared label, 6 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Ghost in the Machine
Ghost in the Machine is a Dutch duo comprising Frank Nitzinsky and Nils van Lingen, formed in 2016. Their industrial techno productions span peak time driving and raw hypnotic styles, with releases on Perc Trax and Zodiak Commune Records.
Connection: 1 shared label, 5 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Yuksek
French producer Pierre-Alexandre Busson from Reims operates under the Yuksek moniker and runs the Partyfine label. His nu disco and indie dance productions appear on Classic Music Company, Sweat it Out!, Razor-N-Tape Records, and Kitsune Musique.
Connection: 1 shared label, 4 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Somniac One
Somniac One is a Lithuanian DJ and producer who has released seven tracks on Perc Trax since 2023. Her music spans hard techno and peak time driving techno with intense, atmosphere-driven productions featuring fierce kicks and innovative sound design.
Connection: 1 shared label, 4 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Michelle
Connection: 1 shared label, 3 shared genres, 1 collaboration
SG Lewis
Samuel George Lewis is a British producer from Reading who operates between London and Los Angeles. His releases on Positiva and Kitsune Musique span house, afro house, and bass house with dance-pop crossover elements.
Connection: 1 shared label, 3 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Tassid
Connection: 1 shared label, 3 shared genres, 1 collaboration
Kraak & Smaak
Connection: 1 shared label, 1 shared genre, 1 collaboration
How We Found These Techno (Peak Time / Driving) Artist Connections
These recommendations are computed from Electrobuzz's archive of 172,163+ releases. Each artist's connection score is based on three signals: shared label affiliations (artists releasing on the same imprints), overlapping genre coverage (artists working in the same musical territories), and direct collaborations (co-releases, remixes, and compilation appearances). The rankings update automatically as new music is published.