Moscoman is an artist with a unifying purpose. Since forming the visionary Disco Halal label in 2015, the Berlin-based, Israeli DJ/producer he has been releasing forward thinking music by friends and collaborators across the globe. From Tel Aviv, Paris and Moscow-based artists to Tokyo producer Yoshinori Hayashi’s recent ‘Uncountable Set’ EP, Disco Halal’s output is becoming increasingly international, with common threads of psych, nu-disco, post-punk and deep house weaving through each release.

Resolutely though, the DJs and producers connected to the label always cast a keen eye to traditional sounds embedded in global cultures. Most notably, in releases fro Red Axes, Naduve, Autarkic, Acid Arab and Mehmet Aslan you will find nods to Middle Eastern folk, psych and blues fused with house and disco energy, bringing new, diverse and wonderful sounds to clubs and dancefloors that may have scarcely been a home for them previously.

Now, after three years, Moscoman – real name Chen Moscovici – has released his first EP on his own label in the form of ‘I Ran’. With previous releases on labels like ESP Institute and Cosmo Vitelli’s I’m a Cliché, ‘I Ran’ – which DJ Mag premiered a few weeks ago – finds him on top form, serving up a track that utilises a chilling Iranian vocal sample and a driven house groove to create a heady, deep floor filler.

“A good friend of mine from Israel came to my house and played me this,” he says of the track’s source material. “Automatically I loaded it on Ableton, and saw if I could make something of it. At first it was just a jam with some drum machines and synths, but after a while I composed it into a track. I didn’t really think about it while I was doing it. I was just playing around, but I’m happy it turned out to be one of my favourites.”

When considering if there is any socio-political purpose to be found in the diversity of influence that fuels Disco Halal and the artists it champions, Moscoman seems simply determined to transfer ideas of togetherness and shared appreciation through music’s common language, while acutely aware that such a statement can only really do so much.

 “When you get to travel and meet people from everywhere you realise the world is very small,” he says. “But still we created a big wall between us and sadly this is the case in most of the society. I can be romantic and say I try to do some de-building of that wall by representing music from across the globe but, in reality, I don’t think there’s much to do.

“Everybody is different and sadly most people emphasize their thoughts on what’s different and not what’s similar. Music, I think, is always similar though, and has the same purpose and the same motive.”

"The days of simple house or simple techno have changed and it’s the same thing in music production. It evolved, and so did people”

Despite only being active for three years to date, Disco Halal’s rise to prominence has been monumental, not least thanks to the widely celebrated live and DJ sets from the likes of Red Axes, Autarkic and Moscoman himself. Does he feel that dancefloors and club spaces are becoming more and more receptive to the diverse and less directly “dance music” oriented sounds that he and his contemporaries have been championing? 

“I guess there is a longing to belong to anything,” he says. “I think most of the sophisticated dancers can feel this emotion even though it's not in their DNA. Rhythm is universal, melodies are also. Every area has its own scales and ways to perform them. Musical understanding is something you can learn with practice and people can transform themselves into different cultures. 

“I am obsessed with the Japanese day-to-day for example,” he adds. “People go to India to visit Ashrams, people move to Istanbul… People are global these days. You can be born one way, but where you’re going that’s on you and it’s the same thing with musical taste. The days of simple house or simple techno have changed and it’s the same thing in music production. It evolved, and so did people.”