I’ve always been fascinated by the intersection of science and music—and this track was born right at the edge of that intersection.
A few months ago, I asked a simple question: why don’t we use light to build computer chips instead of relying on silicon and electricity? At the time, the answer was, “The technology’s not there yet.” Well, guess what? It’s there now.
On July 14, 2025, researchers from Boston University, UC Berkeley, and Northwestern University announced they had created the world’s first quantum light factory on a chip. Using standard CMOS fabrication (yep, the same process used in everyday electronics), they embedded microring resonators that generate entangled photons—controlled, stabilized, and scalable. It’s not just a lab experiment. This chip is a real step toward quantum photonic computing.
That got me thinking about sync, light, and entanglement—not just in a physics sense, but in the way we move together on the dance floor.
So I built a track around a single, repeated hook:
“Quantum Love.”
Just like entangled photons, this line reappears in different contexts—surging through synth lines, bouncing over Afrobeats rhythms, twisting through Punjabi-inspired beats. It’s minimal, bold, and meant to be shouted back by dancers caught in the pulse.
This isn’t retro. It’s not some nostalgic throwback. It’s forward-facing, globally inspired electronic dance music—powered by science, rhythm, and light.
Thanks for listening.
🎧 Stream/download the track here: https://adamsweet.bandcamp.com/track/quantum-love
🌍 Explore more music and lessons: https://linktr.ee/adamrsweet
Stay tuned—more rhythm experiments are on the way.
—Adam