Otama Records is a small, diversified music studio built to support artists across the full spectrum of sound — from EDM and house music to country, pop, rock, and beyond.

While our foundation is rooted in DJ culture and performance-driven music, our mission extends across genres: helping artists develop their sound, strengthen their identity, and gain the confidence and skills needed to connect with an audience.

We specialize in DJ-style production, remix culture, live performance preparation, artist development, and creative branding. Whether it’s a club-ready electronic track, a country crossover release, or a new artist concept built from the ground up, Otama Records focuses on turning ideas into complete, performance-ready projects.

At our core, we believe music is more than a recording — it is an experience. Our goal is to help artists grow from the studio to the stage, building the skills, presence, and creative direction needed to make that experience real.

Otama Records — developing artists, building sounds, and bringing music to life.

Featured ARTIST

TWL2P

What makes TWL2P different is the way we combine our own lyric writing, hands-on music production, and modern AI tools into one creative process. We do not just push buttons and hope for the best. We write our own lyrics, shape our own ideas, guide the structure, build the vibe, and make the creative choices that give each song its identity. AI is part of the workflow, but it is used to expand ideas, explore possibilities, and help bring our vision to life — not replace the human side of the music.

BlaCK METER

(ꞖLAꜾK MЕƬER)

Born from the darker side of the Midwest club scene, Black Meter is the deep house and tech house alias built for low ceilings, late nights, and rooms where the bass feels heavier than the lights.

The project began as a way to step away from the bigger, brighter energy of festival-driven dance music and explore something more hypnotic: stripped grooves, shadowy synths, pulsing low end, and tracks that build tension instead of chasing instant impact. Where some artists push for the drop, Black Meter lives in the pressure before it.

The name comes from the idea of measuring darkness through rhythm — the space between the kick, the weight of the sub, the movement of a crowd when the room locks into one pulse. It suggests control, restraint, and precision, but also mystery. A meter doesn’t explain the signal. It only tells you something is moving beneath the surface.

Visually, Black Meter is represented through the stylized logo ꞖLꜲꜾK MЕƬER — a warped, futuristic reflection of the official name. The altered letters feel like a signal coming through a broken machine: readable, but not ordinary. Familiar, but slightly corrupted. That balance defines the sound.

Musically, Black Meter blends deep house atmosphere, tech house groove, and late-night club tension. Tracks lean into rolling basslines, smoky textures, minimal vocal fragments, dark percussion, and subtle melodic details that feel more like neon reflections than full daylight. The sound is underground but not inaccessible — serious enough for afterhours, direct enough for the dancefloor.

Black Meter is not about excess. It is about pulse, shadow, repetition, and release.

A project for the moment when the party gets darker, the crowd gets locked in, and the room stops feeling like a place and starts feeling like a machine.

Black Meter measures the night.