top of page

GlassJack’s “Hold On.” Turns EDM Into a Fight for Air.

The rabbit-masked producer channels pressure, survival, and raw emotion into a cinematic EDM release that refuses to let go.


GlassJack ©️ 2026
GlassJack ©️ 2026


“Hold On.” by GlassJack is not trying to be another clean, functional tech house record. It is built to carry weight.


From the first moments, the track leans into contrast. The low-end is persistent, almost stubborn.


A driving pulse that does not let go. Over it, orchestral layers stretch wide and emotional, creating a tension that feels intentional rather than decorative. It is not just “EDM with strings.” It is two opposing states forced to coexist.


That is where the record works.


The bassline feels like pressure. The strings feel like presentation. Together, they mirror the exact idea behind the #Unmaskedcampaign. What you show versus what you carry. The drop does not explode for the sake of energy. It releases just enough to keep you moving, but never fully resolves. That restraint is the point.


Production-wise, GlassJack is sharp. The mix is clean without losing impact. The transitions are controlled. Nothing feels accidental. There is a clear understanding of how to keep a track club-ready while still embedding a soft-like narrative inside the structure.


That balance is rare, especially in a space where most EDM records pick one lane and stay there.



What stands out most is intent.


This is not a “mental health themed” track layered on top of a generic arrangement. The concept is baked into the sound design itself. The EDM and orchestral elements are not there to impress. They are there to contrast. The rhythm is not just for movement. It feels like endurance. They work out as therapy. Intentional and grounded.


The anonymous, rabbit-masked identity of the artist adds another layer. It reinforces the idea of distance between persona and reality without needing to over-explain it. The music carries that tension on its own.


“Hold On.” lands somewhere between functional and emotional. It can live in a set, but it also asks for more attention than most tracks in that environment. That is the trade-off. And in this case, it works in her favor.



This is not just a release. It is positioning.


GlassJack is not aiming to blend into the circuit. It is building a lane where concept and club energy meet without compromise. If the #Unmasked campaign continues with this level of cohesion, it will not feel like marketing. It will feel like a system.











 
 
bottom of page