Kylie Minogue - Tension -sagi Kariv Remix- -
Sagi Kariv, the Tel Aviv-based producer and DJ known for his work with labels like Kontor Records and his ability to weaponize bass music for the mainstream dancefloor, doesn’t simply remix Kylie. He rewires her. He takes the polished, laser-sharp original and shoves it into a dark, pulsating warehouse at 3 AM.
The first thing you notice is the tempo. Kariv doesn’t drastically speed Kylie up; instead, he alters the weight of the beat. The four-on-the-floor kick drum becomes heavier, more industrial—reminiscent of late-2010s tech house but with a rave-ready distortion. He strips away the original’s airy pads in the verses, leaving behind only a skeletal, throbbing bassline and Kylie’s vocal, now echoing as if she’s singing from the bottom of a well.
Kariv understands that the core of “Tension” is anticipation. The original plays with the moment before a kiss. The remix plays with the moment before the strobe light hits. It’s muscular, relentless, and devoid of the usual “pop remix” clichés (no piano house breakdown, no soaring vocal chop). Kylie Minogue - Tension -Sagi Kariv Remix-
It proves that Kylie Minogue at 55 is still a generative force—not just for hits, but for atmosphere . The Sagi Kariv Remix of “Tension” doesn’t relieve the tension; it turns it into a drug. And you’ll want to mainline it.
But the Sagi Kariv Remix? That’s where the tension snaps . Sagi Kariv, the Tel Aviv-based producer and DJ
When Kylie Minogue released Tension in 2023, she wasn’t just giving us another dance-pop anthem. She was laying down a manifesto of friction and release. The original track is a masterclass in minimalist seduction: a slinky, almost predatory bassline, Kylie’s breathless “touch me now” hook, and that iconic, staccato “do-do-do-do” synth. It’s sexy, confident, and clean.
Then comes the drop. Where the original Tension builds to a euphoric, almost synthwave release, Kariv pivots into a loop-driven, hypnotic groove. He isolates that “do-do-do-do” hook and turns it into a stuttering, percussive weapon. It’s no longer a melody; it’s a trigger. The remix lives in the space between anxiety and ecstasy—the true definition of its title. The first thing you notice is the tempo
In a landscape where pop remixes often mean adding a generic “deep house” shuffle, Sagi Kariv has delivered something rare: a functional, DJ-friendly weapon that also works as an art object. This isn’t a remix for radio; it’s for the second room of a festival, the sweat-drenched peak hour, or a solitary drive through a neon-lit city at midnight.
What makes this remix work is that it respects Kylie’s greatest strength: her adaptability. Kylie has never been a diva who imposes her will on a track; she is a chameleon who enters the producer’s world. On the Sagi Kariv remix, she doesn’t sound out of place. Her vocal—cool, slightly detached, knowing—floats perfectly above the chaos. She’s not a pop star crashing a techno party; she’s the ringleader.