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Here Are 6 Must-See Acts at The Warehouse Project India Debut This Week

The Manchester, U.K. dance music series sets up in Bengaluru, Mumbai and Hyderabad  

Oct 24, 2025
Rolling Stone India - Google News

(From left to right) Suchi, Jyoty and DJ Boring perform at The Warehouse Project 2025 in India this week. Photos: Courtesy of the artist

Among the latest in global dance music players coming to India is The Warehouse Project (WHP), which tours Bengaluru (Oct. 24), Mumbai (Oct. 25 and 26), and Hyderabad (Oct. 26) this week. Founded in Manchester, WHP has grown into one of the UK’s most iconic underground club brands, known for hosting cutting-edge electronic acts in industrial warehouse spaces and helping launch the careers of some of the world’s leading techno, house, and bass artists. With its debut India edition, WHP is bringing down the likes of Joy Orbison, Fold, Jyoty B2B Cinnaman, Berlin duo DJ Heartstring, and more. Indian artists like Ox7gen, Film, Nida, Anushka, Fushii, and Vrdian are also slated to take the decks.

Beyond these names, here are six artist sets we’re looking forward to at WHP across each city.

Suchi

Norwegian-Indian multidisciplinary artist Suchi Ahuja (who goes by her first name as an artist) is no stranger to India, considering she inaugurated New Delhi music platform Boxout.fm’s compilation series in 2021 with Suchi Selects. While that was filled with Nineties U.K. breaks, house, electro and techno, expect more playful selections that revel in hypnotic and psychedelic sounds, as well as polyrhythms, as she tours all three cities as part of WHP this week.  

Jyoty

Amsterdam-born Jyoty Singh is also an Indian-origin DJ-producer like Suchi, but there’s a different sonic universe that she brings to the dancefloor. From co-hosting a show on the mainstay Rinse FM in 2017 to performing at festivals including All Points East and Glastonbury in the U.K., Jyoty will go B2B with Dutch DJ Cinnaman at The Warehouse Project in Mumbai on Oct. 26, to play a set spanning everything from baile funk to house, UK garage, hip-hop, and techno.

Kampai

You may have seen DJ-producer Kampai, aka Rumit Virmani, perched atop an open bus spinning a set as he passed through the Bandra-Worli Sealink, or in his Boiler Room sets, or behind the scenes at gig series like SoMad in Bengaluru. A promoter, curator and selector, there’s a fluidity in Kampai’s sets that makes him a veritable fit for most lineups. Ranging from bass music to hip-hop to UK garage and more, few can gauge the pulse of a room and run with it like Kampai. Catch Kampai’s B2B set with Ebitda on Oct. 24 at WHP in Bengaluru.

DJ Boring

Australia-born, London-based artist DJ Boring, aka Tristan Hallis, is in India on the back of debuting a new live show called Tomorrow Never Comes (featuring tracks from his upcoming album), performing in Mumbai on Oct. 25 and in Hyderabad on Oct. 26, 2025, at The Warehouse Project India. With breakout tracks like “Winona” (2016) showcasing the kind of positive, euphoric vibes the artist is known to bring, expect a catharsis-driven set that spans genres and focuses on an experience you’ll likely be talking about long after he’s stepped off.

Logic1000

It’s a homecoming of sorts for Sydney-born, Berlin-based DJ and producer Logic1000, aka Samantha Poulter, who will make her India debut at WHP Mumbai on Oct. 25 and Hyderabad on Oct. 26, 2025. In a post announcing her shows, she said that her family tree and DNA tests revealed she has Indian roots. “Playing this incredible show on an incredible lineup like this feels so surreal. A lucky moment in time. I’ll be bringing my daughter to show her this side of her identity,” she added. The artist, who had an acclaimed album called Mother out in 2024 and also gained a following after electronic artist Four Tet dropped her track “Please Forgive Me” at Coachella, is known for lighting up sweaty late-night dancefloors.

Aayna

Kolkata-origin DJ-producer Aayna performs at The Warehouse Project in Mumbai on Oct. 26, 2025, on the back of knocking off sets at festivals like DGTL Mumbai and Bengaluru, plus Boiler Room in Pune earlier this year. There’s a vintage aesthetic combined with sounds “heavily influenced by the Roland TB-303 and acid house greats of the 80s and 90s” according to the festival. Aayna will be going B2B with fellow New Delhi producer Film, aka Sanil Sudan, at WHP this week. She said in a post, “B2B with Sanil is like going head to head with my big brother on a game we both love and live on; it’s like showing your big bro what you’ve learnt and how you can keep up with his antics and surprise him some too.”

Get tickets for The Warehouse Project India 2025 here.

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