Wang Records is an independent UK dance music label born as a spin-off from Beastwang.

The label was created to take the energy, music knowledge and community built through Beastwang and contribute to the dance music scene in a different way. Where Beastwang existed through live events, Wang Records gave the brand a recorded output: a platform for new artists, new sounds and underground club music with a clear visual and cultural identity.

The label has played a role in pushing a new wave of UK club music after the modern bassline era, supporting artists working across alternative bass, UK garage, breaks, bass-heavy house and forward-thinking underground sounds. Its releases have reached clubs, festivals and radio shows across the world, with support from respected names including Annie Mac, DJ EZ, The Blessed Madonna and more.

Wang Records has achieved millions of streams across its catalogue, secured sync placements on Netflix, and received multiple plays across major dance music radio stations. The label’s music has moved between underground club spaces and wider cultural platforms, showing how independent releases can travel when the sound, branding and audience are aligned.

The label has worked with artists including: Hamdi, Higgo, Drinks On Me, MPH, Burt Cope, Badger, Smokey Bubblin’ B, Kobe JT, Tenshu, WZA, Ghoulish, Edward White, Zefer, Mar’One, Yumna Black and Zero.

Behind the scenes, Wang Records involves responsibility across A&R, release strategy, artist communication, marketing, branding, calendar management, designer briefs, social media, budgeting, CRM management and wider business strategy.

The label combines music discovery, creative direction and commercial thinking. Each release requires an understanding of the artist, the sound, the audience, the visual world, the promotional route and the wider scene it belongs to.

Wang Records is a real-world example of how an events-led community can evolve into a record label, using cultural knowledge, design, audience insight and industry relationships to support new music and help shape the direction of underground UK dance music.