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Interplanetary Criminal

estimated reading time: 6 min read

Early Life and Family Background

Interplanetary Criminal was born Zachary Bruce on December 16, 1993, in Blackburn, Lancashire, England. Raised primarily in the North West of England, Bruce’s upbringing unfolded across Blackburn, Liverpool, Bolton, and Manchester — cities whose distinct musical histories would profoundly shape his artistic identity.

Bruce has publicly acknowledged his mixed heritage, revealing that his mother is half-Singaporean. This multicultural background subtly informed his broad artistic worldview and openness toward genre hybridization, something that would later become central to his music.

Unlike many mainstream celebrities, Interplanetary Criminal has kept much of his family life private. Little public information exists regarding his parents or siblings, reflecting his broader preference for allowing the music itself to remain at the center of his public identity.

Growing up in Northern England during the late 1990s and early 2000s, Bruce was immersed in a region deeply connected to rave culture, pirate radio traditions, bassline house, and UK garage. The North possessed a particularly raw and energetic club culture, one less polished than London’s elite nightlife scene but arguably more emotionally intense.

This environment would become foundational to his artistic philosophy.


Education and Early Musical Development

Bruce developed an early fascination with sound engineering, rhythm programming, and DJ culture. While many aspiring musicians pursue traditional instrumental training, his education came primarily through dance music itself: pirate radio broadcasts, club nights, internet forums, record collections, and experimentation with production software.

He later attended the School of Sound Recording in Manchester, where he formally studied audio production and engineering. This technical education provided him with advanced knowledge of:

  • Mixing techniques
  • Sound design
  • Frequency balancing
  • Analog and digital production workflows
  • DJ equipment systems

Around 2012, Bruce began DJing and producing electronic music seriously. His earliest productions leaned toward darker breakbeat and lo-fi house sounds, reflecting the influence of artists associated with Europe’s underground electronic renaissance.

At the time, electronic music culture was shifting dramatically. EDM had become globally commercialized through festival superstars, yet simultaneously, a counter-movement was emerging within underground circles — one focused on rawness, nostalgia, and underground authenticity.

Interplanetary Criminal would become one of that movement’s most important voices.


The Birth of Interplanetary Criminal

The alias “Interplanetary Criminal” immediately distinguished Bruce from conventional electronic artists. The name evoked old-school rave eccentricity while signaling his refusal to conform to commercial dance music expectations.

His early releases appeared through independent labels and underground platforms including:

  • Shall Not Fade
  • Time Is Now
  • Sneaker Social Club
  • Banoffee Pies
  • E-Beamz

These releases circulated heavily through:

  • SoundCloud communities
  • Underground DJ sets
  • Online rave forums
  • UK bass music circles

His debut EP, Intergalactic Jack (2017), introduced listeners to his signature aesthetic:

  • Heavy bass pressure
  • Speed garage swing
  • Jungle-inspired percussion
  • Warehouse rave energy
  • Lo-fi textures
  • Deep emotional atmosphere

While his productions referenced classic UK genres, they never felt like simple nostalgia exercises. Instead, Bruce modernized those sounds for younger audiences raised on internet culture and algorithm-driven discovery.


Manchester and the UK Garage Revival

By the late 2010s, Interplanetary Criminal had become increasingly associated with Manchester’s rapidly evolving electronic underground.

Manchester historically played a vital role in British dance culture through institutions like:

  • The Haçienda
  • Factory Records
  • Acid house rave culture
  • Northern bassline scenes

Bruce absorbed these traditions while simultaneously embracing newer underground movements emerging across Europe.

Importantly, he became part of a broader UK garage revival movement alongside artists such as:

  • Sammy Virji
  • Silva Bumpa
  • Oppidan
  • Main Phase

Together, these artists helped reintroduce UK garage — particularly speed garage and bassline-influenced styles — to international dancefloors.

Bruce’s productions stood out because they balanced:

  • Underground credibility
  • Dancefloor accessibility
  • Technical sophistication
  • Emotional immediacy

ATW Records and Independent Vision

In 2019, Interplanetary Criminal co-founded ATW Records with producer Main Phase.

The label became a crucial platform for contemporary UK garage and bass-oriented dance music, championing a new generation of producers inspired by:

  • 2-step garage
  • Jungle
  • Breakbeat
  • Bassline
  • Hardcore rave

ATW’s philosophy reflected Bruce’s belief that underground dance music should remain community-driven rather than corporate-controlled.

The label quickly became influential within global rave circles and helped nurture the next wave of garage artists emerging throughout Europe.


“B.O.T.A.” and Global Breakthrough

The defining turning point in Interplanetary Criminal’s career arrived in 2022 with the release of:

“B.O.T.A. (Baddest Of Them All)”

with Eliza Rose

Initially released independently, the track exploded through:

  • TikTok
  • DJ sets
  • Ibiza clubs
  • Radio support
  • Streaming platforms

Built around a sample from the classic dance track “Let The Beat Hit ’Em,” the song fused old-school rave energy with contemporary club production.

The track achieved:

  • No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart
  • Multi-platinum certification
  • Global festival circulation
  • BRIT Award nomination
  • Mainstream crossover success

Its success was historically significant because it marked one of the clearest moments in which UK garage returned to mainstream British pop consciousness after years of relative underground isolation.

For Bruce, however, the success carried both opportunities and challenges.


Navigating Mainstream Success

Following “B.O.T.A.,” Interplanetary Criminal faced a dilemma familiar to many underground artists:
How could he embrace wider success without sacrificing authenticity?

Critics and fans debated whether his increasing popularity risked diluting the underground spirit of UK garage. Some longtime followers preferred his darker, rougher early productions, while newer audiences embraced his festival-ready material.

Bruce navigated this carefully by continuing to:

  • Release underground club tracks
  • Perform intimate rave sets
  • Support emerging artists
  • Maintain credibility within bass music culture

Rather than abandoning the underground, he expanded it.


Production Style and Musical Identity

Interplanetary Criminal’s sound is deeply rooted in British rave history.

His productions frequently incorporate:

  • Speed garage basslines
  • Shuffle-heavy percussion
  • Jungle rhythms
  • Breakbeat structures
  • Bassline house energy
  • Donk and Northern club influences
  • Vocal samples
  • Dubwise low-end pressure

Unlike polished EDM maximalism associated with mainstream festival music, his work often feels intentionally raw, urgent, and physical.

His DJ sets are similarly eclectic, moving fluidly between:

  • UK garage
  • House
  • Grime
  • Jungle
  • Bassline
  • Hard house
  • Techno

This genre fluidity helped him appeal to younger ravers uninterested in rigid genre boundaries.


Collaborations and Expanding Influence

Following his breakthrough, Bruce collaborated with a wide range of influential artists across electronic music.

Notable collaborators include:

  • KETTAMA
  • SadBoi
  • Original Koffee
  • Sammy Virji
  • Blanco

Tracks such as:

  • No Time
  • Damager
  • Yosemite
  • Slow Burner

demonstrated his growing versatility and international reach.

His collaborations increasingly bridged:

  • UK garage
  • Dancehall
  • Rap
  • Bass music
  • Techno
  • Mainstream electronic culture

Awards and Recognition

Selected Awards and Honors

YearAwardResult
2023BRIT Award – Song of the Year (“B.O.T.A.”)Nominated
2025Juno Award – Dance Recording of the Year (“No Time”)Won
2025DJ Mag Best DJ AwardWon
2025Mixmag Cover FeatureHonored
2025Sold-Out Brixton Academy Headline ShowCareer Milestone

Discography Summary

Albums

YearTitle
2018Get Money

Key EPs

YearRelease
2017Intergalactic Jack
2019Sleepwalker
2020Darkside
2020Warehouse Romance
2021Dangerous
2022ATW002 (with Main Phase)

Selected Singles

YearTitle
2022B.O.T.A. (Baddest Of Them All)
2024No Time
2024Damager
2024Yosemite
2025Slow Burner
2025Badman Control

Live Performances and Global Touring

Interplanetary Criminal evolved into one of electronic music’s most in-demand live performers.

Major appearances include:

  • Boiler Room
  • Coachella
  • Glastonbury
  • Creamfields
  • Love Saves The Day
  • DGTL Festival
  • Brixton Academy

His performances became known for:

  • Relentless crowd energy
  • Bass-heavy sound design
  • Fast transitions
  • Underground rave atmosphere
  • Emotional audience connection

Even in large commercial venues, Bruce often attempted to recreate the intimacy and chaos of warehouse rave culture.


Public Persona and Personal Philosophy

Despite his growing fame, Interplanetary Criminal has maintained a relatively grounded public image.

Unlike celebrity-focused EDM personalities, he projects:

  • Humility
  • Scene loyalty
  • Underground credibility
  • Community orientation

Interviews reveal a producer deeply aware of dance music history and protective of rave culture’s emotional authenticity.

He has repeatedly emphasized that dance music should feel communal rather than transactional.


Cultural Impact and Legacy

Interplanetary Criminal’s influence extends beyond hit singles.

His broader legacy includes:

  • Revitalizing UK garage globally
  • Introducing younger audiences to rave history
  • Bridging underground and mainstream electronic culture
  • Elevating Northern UK club aesthetics
  • Supporting independent dance labels
  • Expanding bass music internationally

Perhaps most importantly, he helped prove that underground British dance genres could achieve mainstream success without completely losing their identity.

In many ways, Interplanetary Criminal represents the modern evolution of rave culture itself:
globalized yet local,
nostalgic yet forward-looking,
underground yet widely influential.


Recent Activities and Future Outlook (2025–2026)

By 2025 and 2026, Bruce stood at the forefront of the global UK garage explosion.

Recent highlights included:

  • International headline tours
  • Massive festival appearances
  • Collaborations across genres
  • Expansion into North American audiences
  • Continued underground releases through ATW Records

Critics increasingly viewed him not merely as a successful producer, but as one of the defining cultural figures of the modern UK garage revival.