Oxford Hustlers
OriginSydney, Australia
GenresDance, Funky House, Progressive House
Years active2009–present
MembersMurray Hood
Brett Austin

Oxford Hustlers are an Australian dance band from Sydney, Australia. Composed of DJs Brett Austin, and Murray Hood. They have worked alongside Katherine Ellis on their debut single "Love U More", a cover of the 1992 hit of "Sunscreem".

Career

The Oxford Hustlers began their careers in the music industry as DJs on the Sydney club scene. In 2009, they formed Oxford Hustlers. Their name came about from the main party strip "Oxford Street" in Sydney, Australia. In their short time they made a marked impact on the Australian dance music scene, and have produced remixes for artists such as Christina Aguilera, The Saturdays, Wynter Gordon, Inaya Day, The Fierce Collective, and Dirty Laundry. Their debut single in collaboration with Katherine Ellis was released on 15 November 2010 on Fierce Angel.[1]

Discography

Remixography

2009

2010

  • Technero / "One World" / Neon Records (#10 ARIA Club Chart)
  • Antoinne Dessant & Inaya Day / "Joy" (#11 ARIA Club Chart)
  • Dirty Laundry / "I Want You to Fly" (#23 ARIA Club Chart)
  • Kimberly Davis / "Twist of Love" / D1 Music (#9 Billboard Hot Dance Club Play Chart)
  • The Fierce Collective Ft. Peyton & Lady V / "Baker Street" / Fierce Angel Records

2011

  • Martin Wright feat. Angie Brown / "Can't Get To Sleep" / Fierce Angel Records
  • Melissa Indot / "China" / Fierce Angel Records
  • Wynter Gordon / "Till Death" / Neon Records (#5 ARIA Club Chart)
  • Soraya Vivian vs Digital 96 / "When I'm Dancin'" / Fierce Angel Records
  • The Saturdays / "My Heart Takes Over" / Fascination
  • 7th Heaven ft. Donna Gardier-Elliott / "Don't Make Me Wait" / Ego
  • Bitrocka ft. Sushi / "Give Me The Love"

2012

2013

  • Paulini / "Hearbreak is Over" / Ministry of Sound

References

  1. "Love U More Vol 2 by Oxford Hustlers feat Katherine Ellis on MP3 and WAV at Juno Download". Archived from the original on 2010-11-17. Retrieved 2010-10-28.
  2. "Dance Club Songs Chart". Billboard.com. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.