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[NEWS] NSD Is Back: SKisM Confirms Never Say Die's Next Chapter

In a five-part Facebook Q&A, SKisM confirms Never Say Die is back as a label — not the 2012 machine, but a more curated chapter with singles, EPs, mixes, and a demo inbox opening soon.

Image de couverture - [NEWS] NSD Is Back: SKisM Confirms Never Say Die's Next Chapter
Table des matières
  1. Not the 2012 machine
  2. Project by project, not a full roster reboot
  3. Demos: the door is opening again
  4. Same DNA, different way of working
  5. Freedom is the real driver
  6. Singles, EPs, remixes — and Black Label?

Since Never Say Die Vol. 7 dropped, one question kept circulating: is NSD actually coming back, or was the compilation a farewell? The answer is yes — Never Say Die is back. SKisM confirmed it in a carousel of five short clips on Facebook, answering community questions from his studio. Facebook doesn't publish captions for this content, so we manually transcribed what he says, keeping his casual phrasing intact.

Not the 2012 machine

SKisM is upfront: this is not an attempt to rebuild old-school Never Say Die. The label as it ran in 2012 or 2014 — the team, the release schedule, the volume — is done.

"It's not going to be the old machine. We're not trying to rebuild what we had in 2012, 2014. That version of the label, the way we operated, the team, the release schedule — that's done."

The new chapter will be more curated and more focused: less volume, more quality. No more signing 30 artists and dropping a comp every month. The label stays alive after Vol. 7, and SKisM confirms he's actively cooking — literally in the studio while recording the clips.

Project by project, not a full roster reboot

On structure: no mass re-signing of the old roster. Releases will happen project by project — some OGs will return for one-offs, new names will join too. Mixes are part of the plan; Vol. 7's 100-track mix is the proof.

On release frequency, SKisM admits he doesn't have a fixed calendar yet. The old "every six weeks" cycle is gone — when they have something they love, they'll put it out.

Demos: the door is opening again

Good news for producers who've dreamed of landing on NSD: a demo inbox is coming. Not open today, but "soon." Early on, the team will reach out to people they already know; the goal is a proper demo submission channel. SKisM's message to new artists: send music when the official announcement drops.

Same DNA, different way of working

On the label's intention, the founder goes back to the source. In 2009, Never Say Die started from a simple need: put out the bass music they loved because no one else was. "It was selfish, really. We just wanted a home for our sound."

Today, the intention is similar, but SKisM isn't 25 anymore and doesn't want to run a label 24/7. He wants to do it for the love, without industry politics, without burning out the team. Same DNA — heavy, fun bass music — but done sustainably.

Freedom is the real driver

What excites him most about the comeback? Freedom. No chasing algorithms or doing what a distributor tells them. Want to drop a weird riddim track on a Tuesday? They can. And the crossover between artists they haven't worked with in 10 years and kids who grew up on NSD — that's what he's buzzing for.

Singles, EPs, remixes — and Black Label?

Vol. 7 was the final compilation in the old series, not the final release ever. Singles and EPs are confirmed. A remix pack for Vol. 7 is in the works, targeted for release in the next couple of months.

On NSD: Black Label, he gets asked every day. SKisM reminds everyone the sub-label was shut down because it sounded too much like main NSD. Right now, no plans to bring the name back, but the darker, clubbier stuff will live on Never Say Die proper. Never say never, though.


Never Say Die remains one of the labels that defined global dubstep — from Zomboy to Must Die!, Eptic to Samplifire. This comeback, smaller in scale but just as heavy in intent, is one to watch closely.

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