You hear it before you see it.
The bass seeps through the walls of the bar, a low, steady pulse that grows louder with every step closer to the door. Inside, bodies move instinctively, shoulders loose, heads nodding in unison. Someone laughs near the bar. Someone else closes their eyes on the dance floor, letting the beat take over. And at the center of it all, half-hidden behind decks and flashing lights, is a DJ who seems to know exactly what the room needs.
This is how most people meet Basti Estrada.
At just 21, the University of the Philippines Diliman student has become one of the most talked-about selectors in Metro Manila’s nightlife circuit. He’s young, stylish, and increasingly impossible to ignore — but it’s not the face that keeps people dancing until closing time. It’s the sound.
Watch him play and you’ll notice it quickly: the way he scans the crowd, the way he holds a groove just long enough before switching gears. His sets move fluidly across genres — House melting into Afrobeats, Reggaeton slipping into Baile Funk, Amapiano riding into Miami Bass, then dipping into Techno when the night demands something darker.
If it grooves, it goes.
His instinctive ability to read a room has made him a favorite in packed bars and clubs, where a wrong transition can empty a dance floor and the right one can turn strangers into a single, sweating mass of movement. Basti keeps it full. Always.
Like many DJs of his generation, Basti didn’t start with grand ambitions. He started out of boredom.
In 2024, what began as experimenting with music at private parties — shared mostly among friends — slowly turned into something bigger. Word spread. Someone brought him to a bar. Then another. Then another.
Before long, his name was appearing behind the decks at some of the city’s most active nightlife spots: Apotheka, Xin Chao, Treehouse Poblacion, Living Room at 42, Lan Kwai Speakeasy, and even The Ugly Bar in La Union. What was once a gatekept secret was suddenly becoming a familiar presence.
His influences — Kaytranada, Marco Pedro, S!RENE — are audible but never copied. Instead, Basti blends global sounds into something distinctly his own.
For Basti, DJing is about building moments, and eventually, communities.
That vision took shape when he co-founded Up North Sounds with fellow DJ-producer Tristan Monsod. The concept is simple: curate events that bring global music culture to the Philippines, without losing the intimacy that makes nights memorable.
Their debut event, Episode 1: The Launch of South Rhythms Up North, held on 15 January, felt like proof of concept.
The venue was packed. People of all genders moved together, locked into the rhythm. Even those who usually linger at the bar were bouncing, drawn into the energy. Outside, more people waited, hoping to get in — on a Thursday night, no less — as the sound spilled onto Katipunan Avenue.
What sets Basti apart isn’t just technical skill or a good ear — it’s the way his sets linger.
You leave the venue still humming a beat, still feeling the high, already wondering when you’ll catch the next one.
With talent and charisma working hand in hand, Basti doesn’t just play for a crowd. He builds one.
And if you’re wondering when that next moment might come, Up North Sounds is already gearing up for Episode 2 on 10 February, at E285 Katipunan. A Tuesday night out, powered by guaranteed energy and relentless grooves.
Suddenly, staying in doesn’t sound like an option.
So — who TF is Basti Estrada?
He’s the beat you hear before you see the room.
The DJ who knows when to hold back — and when to let it drop.
And if Metro Manila’s nightlife has anything to say about it, he’s just getting started.