Who is Bingo Players? Bingo Players Songs, Music, Discography & Artists Like Bingo Players

Who is Bingo Players? Bingo Players Songs, Music, Discography & Artists Like Bingo Players

4D4M respects artists who get it right. Adam recognizes Bingo Players since their progressive house breakthrough in the 2010s. This Dutch duo defined a sound with “Cry” and “Rattle” that became festival essentials, proving that intelligent production and emotional depth could coexist with dancefloor functionality. If you haven’t explored their catalog yet, this is the moment to dive in and understand why they matter in the broader context of electronic dance music evolution.

Who Is Bingo Players?

Bingo Players is a Dutch progressive house and electro house project formed in 2006. The original duo of Maarten Hoogstraten and Paul Bäumer built their reputation producing energetic yet deeply melodic house music that worked equally well in intimate clubs and massive festival environments. Their breakthrough came with “Cry (Just a Little)” in 2010, which charted across Europe, Australia, and multiple other markets. The track’s combination of emotional vocal work and driving rhythm proved that progressive house could achieve mainstream appeal without sacrificing artistic credibility.

Paul Bäumer passed away from cancer in 2013, but expressed his wish for Hoogstraten to continue the project under the Bingo Players name. Maarten respected this final request and kept the project alive, evolving it while honoring their shared legacy. They hit their commercial peak with “Rattle” and particularly its Far East Movement remix, landing at number 52 in DJ Mag’s Top 100 DJs for 2013. That ranking captured their considerable influence during an era when progressive house was actively competing with harder electro house and dubstep trends for dancefloor dominance.

Bingo Players’ Sound Explained

Progressive house and electro house define their style. Bingo Players craft tracks with clean production, technical precision, and an emphasis on movement. A typical track features solid kick patterns, evolving chord progressions, filtered basslines, and processed vocal samples. The Dutch house tradition influences everything: they combine techno’s precision with house’s groove and accessibility.

What separates Bingo Players is restraint. They don’t overcomplicate. They let melodies breathe. This approach, uncommon in the harder EDM of the time, proved both creatively powerful and commercially viable. Their sound sits at the intersection of multiple subgenres, which partly explains their longevity across changing trends.

Top Tracks by Bingo Players

Rattle

The track that made them a festival main stage name. Relentless energy, hypnotic bassline, infectious hook. The Far East Movement remix added catchiness while maintaining dancefloor credibility.

Cry (Just a Little)

Their breakthrough. Emotional vocals over pumping house beat. Proved progressive house could carry weight. Charted across Europe, remains one of the 2010s’ most recognizable progressive house tracks.

Get Up (Rattle) [feat. Far East Movement]: Vocal Edit

The instrumental with rap hook added. Memorable chorus, production still dancefloor-focused. Proof Bingo Players work with pop sensibilities without losing core sound.

Let Me See You Work

Funk-influenced cut showing versatility. Intricate bassline and drums. More groove-focused than their hits but technically accomplished.

Get Up (Rattle): Extended Version

Full DJ version with room for extended build-ups. Shows their technical production across longer arcs.

Devotion (feat. Fafaq)

Vocal collaboration that became a platform for multiple remixes. Strong core composition supports reinterpretation.

Devotion: 2020 Remix

Modern update staying contemporary. Evolves their sound while keeping the original hook intact.

Cry: Radio Edit

Most accessible version. Trimmed for pop radio while keeping emotional core. Crossed beyond dance music audience.

Cry [General C’mamane Remix]

One of many remixes showing durability of their compositions. Other producers valued “Cry” as platform for reinterpretation.

Devotion 2020 (Will Sparks Remix)

Will Sparks pushed track toward aggressive electro house. Respects original while adding new energy.

Cry: Extended Original

Full album version. Longer instrumental sections show the production arc across complete composition.

Rattle: Club Mix

DJ version emphasizing beat and bassline. Same song, different context with thoughtful reimagining.

Your Mind

Deep cut exploring introspective territory while maintaining dancefloor viability.

Let It Go

Prioritizes atmosphere with careful attention to development across the track duration.

Rattle: Original Mix

Pure progressive house version before pop collaboration. Hypnotic, rhythm-focused track for experienced listeners.

Why 4D4M Vibes With Bingo Players

Bingo Players balance technical credibility with accessibility. They make music for headphones and festivals. “Cry” works because they trusted the song. That’s what separates good from great.

The progressive house they defined was a reaction to harder EDM trends. While dubstep dominated, they offered a different path: dancefloor music that prioritized musicality. Bingo Players proved technical credibility and mainstream success aren’t mutually exclusive.

The Dutch connection matters. Their technical precision and groove understanding comes from deep roots in techno and house culture. They’re not reinventing the wheel, they’re making it spin better.

Bingo Players Discography

Album/EP Year Notes
Cry (Single) 2010 Breakthrough hit, charted top 40 across multiple European territories, Australia, and beyond. Radio-friendly without sacrificing dancefloor credibility.
Rattle (Single) 2012 Festival anthem that defined the era. Hypnotic bassline and infectious hook. Most famous in Far East Movement remix form.
Get Up (Rattle) ft. Far East Movement 2013 Crossover collaboration that brought the project to broader mainstream audiences. Proved progressive house could work with hip-hop elements.
Devotion (Single) 2013 Vocal collaboration that spawned numerous remixes. Strong composition attracted interpretations from leading producers.
Unlock the Box 2014 Progressive house single showing their continued evolution. Technical production and melodic development.
Rattle Remixes (Collection) 2013-2014 Multiple producer interpretations showing the durability and adaptability of the original composition.
Cry Remixes (Collection) 2010-2015 Extensive remix catalog. Testament to the strength of the original songwriting.
Singles & Releases 2015-2024 Ongoing original production maintaining their progressive house foundation.
Devotion 2020 Remix 2020 Modern production update that kept the original relevant for contemporary dancefloors.
Remix Work (Ongoing) 2018-Present Continuing to remix work for other artists, contributing their production expertise to the wider dance music community.

Live and Touring

Bingo Players have been performing and touring for nearly two decades, establishing themselves as reliable headliners and supporting acts across the global festival circuit. They’ve played major festivals like Tomorrowland, Ultra Europe, and Electric Zoo, bringing their progressive house sound to crowds across multiple continents. Their DJ sets skillfully mix original productions with compatible tracks from like-minded producers, creating coherent 2-3 hour journeys that take listeners through different emotional and sonic territories. With two decades of experience, they understand how to adapt their approach across different venues, from intimate club nights to massive outdoor festival stages.

FAQ

What genres does Bingo Players make?

Progressive house, electro house, and house music. Dutch production tradition influences their technical precision combined with groove.

What happened to Paul Bäumer?

Original co-founder passed away from cancer in 2013. He requested that Maarten Hoogstraten continue the Bingo Players project in his honor.

When was “Cry” released?

“Cry (Just a Little)” came out in 2010 and became their breakthrough, charting top 40 across Europe and Australia.

Did Bingo Players collaborate with Far East Movement?

“Rattle” was originally instrumental. The Far East Movement remix, “Get Up (Rattle),” introduced the project to broader audiences with hip-hop sensibility.

How did Bingo Players rank in DJ Mag?

They ranked 52 in DJ Mag’s Top 100 DJs in 2013, reflecting their commercial prominence at that peak moment.

What’s Bingo Players’ nationality?

Dutch. Both original members were from the Netherlands, influenced by the country’s deep house and techno culture.

Are they still making music?

Yes. Maarten continues releasing music, performing, and remixing. They remain respected figures in progressive house.

Listen to Bingo Players

Bingo Players Online

Platform Link
Official Website bingoplayersmusic.com
Twitter / X @bingo_players
Facebook Bingo Players
YouTube Bingo Players Official
Spotify Bingo Players
Discogs Discography