Joshua Milú ‘Sucito: A Home’ – out now!
Joshua Milú’s Sucito: A Home may only last 10 minutes and 47 seconds, but it squeezes more personality, purpose, and pulse into its runtime than many full-length albums manage in an hour. The London-based producer and vocalist turns his experiences of working-class life, queer self-discovery, and navigating the city into a vibrant electronic journey that feels equally suited to late-night reflection and packed dancefloors. It’s intimate without being heavy, thoughtful without sacrificing fun.
From the opening moments of “Mayhem,” Milú demonstrates a knack for pairing emotional storytelling with irresistible grooves. The production is punchy and kinetic, drawing inspiration from house music’s communal spirit while maintaining a distinctly personal perspective. “Oatmeal” follows with a playful sense of everyday realism, transforming routine and repetition into something surprisingly infectious. Throughout the EP, there’s a feeling that every beat serves a purpose, carrying fragments of memory, ambition, and identity along with it.
The standout title track, “A Home,” brings everything together beautifully. Exploring acceptance, belonging, and community, it captures the central idea of the project: that sometimes the dancefloor can become the place where you learn who you are. Warm, melodic, and emotionally resonant, the track closes the EP on a note that feels hopeful rather than resolved. As the first chapter in the larger Sucito series, Sucito: A Home is a compelling introduction to Joshua Milú’s world—one where personal stories meet club culture, and where every rhythm carries a little piece of home.
https://open.spotify.com/album/64NMoVqrtdTUOFktcZ7Nj7?si=kKTzWN50QWaOLCE_YG_5Dw
<iframe data-testid=”embed-iframe” style=”border-radius:12px” src=”https://open.spotify.com/embed/album/64NMoVqrtdTUOFktcZ7Nj7?utm_source=generator&si=7c9633017cbf488d” width=”100%” height=”352″ frameBorder=”0″ allowfullscreen=”” allow=”autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; fullscreen; picture-in-picture” loading=”lazy”></iframe>