Trance Music Tracks

Trance tracks from independent producers. Uplifting, progressive, psy-trance and melodic trance ready to stream, download and license.

Trance is the sound of long build-ups, cathartic drops and emotional melodies that hit at 138 BPM. From uplifting main-room anthems and progressive journeys to psytrance's kick-and-bass hypnosis, this category collects trance music uploaded by the producers making it — no gatekeepers, no promo pools, no waiting for label sign-off.

Every track on Musiconect streams in full before you decide to download, favourite or buy. BPM, key and duration are tagged so you can plan sets around energy curves. Producer profiles link back so you can follow catalogues, book artists for events or commission remixes.

Trance is a category where curation matters more than volume — the wrong track kills momentum, the right one owns a room. Use the search, BPM filter and newest-first sort to find material that fits your set. If you play the melodic end, look for progressive and uplifting tags around 130–138 BPM; if you play psytrance, focus on 140–150 BPM cuts with driving 16-note basslines.

The trance category on Musiconect skews toward independent producers building catalogues in public rather than the massive label rosters — which means fresher, more differentiated material for DJs who want to stand out from Beatport top-100 sets. Support the artists whose sound you play, and follow their profiles to catch new releases first.

Frequently asked questions about Trance

What BPM is trance?

Trance sits between 130 and 150 BPM depending on sub-genre. Progressive and uplifting trance is 130–138 BPM; psytrance and Goa trance run 140–150 BPM; tech-trance overlaps 134–140 BPM.

What are the main sub-genres of trance?

Uplifting trance, progressive trance, psytrance (psy), Goa trance, tech-trance and vocal trance. Producers on Musiconect tag their uploads so you can filter for the specific sub-genre you play.

Can I mix trance tracks from different sub-genres?

Yes — trance sub-genres share the same 4/4 pulse and often mix well within a 4–8 BPM range. Use the BPM tag on each track to plan transitions, and match keys with the harmonic tag to keep mixes musical.

Where can I download new trance music?

Independent producers upload new trance tracks to Musiconect every week. Sort by "Newest" to see the latest additions, follow artists to see their upcoming releases in your feed, and buy tracks directly from their profiles.

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