"The industry tells you to protect your brand, your sound, your style," Zevran concludes. "Diego and I decided to break our brands. That is the work. You flip them. You flop them. And if you trust each other, you build something stronger than you ever could alone."
While both have individually carved out impressive niches—Zevran with his deep, percussive Afro house grooves and Sans with his melodic, emotionally-charged techno undertones—it is their collaborative methodology, dubbed "Flipflop Work," that is turning heads across the underground circuit. sean zevran and diego sans flipflop work
"It’s less about 'your track' or 'my track,'" Diego Sans interjects. "It’s about flipping the context. Sean will take a percussive loop I’ve been playing for four minutes, flip the tempo, and turn it into a breakbeat bridge. I then flip that into a techno drop. The work is the reversal of expectations." To the untrained ear, a set by Sean Zevran and Diego Sans sounds like a masterclass in high-energy eclecticism. To the trained eye, it is a logistical marvel. Their rider is unique: two identical Pioneer CDJ-3000 setups synced via Pro DJ Link, four channels on a DJM-V10 mixer, and two separate effects units. "The industry tells you to protect your brand,
In an electronic music landscape often characterized by solo super-stardom, transient back-to-back sets, and ghost-produced radio hits, the concept of a genuine, long-term DJ partnership feels almost antiquated. Enter Sean Zevran and Diego Sans. You flip them