Soho Beach House opened its doors early on April 11th, with guests arriving from 5 PM and easing into a sunset session shaped by ocean views and a relaxed social pace. The terrace filled gradually, drinks in hand, as the early hours leaned more toward conversation than dancing.
Photo credit: Awais Jamal
By the time Marie Posa stepped in at 7 PM, the shift was noticeable. The floor began to form with more intent, and the energy moved from background to focus without breaking the mood that had already been built. Her role became clear: to guide the room forward while preserving that balance.
Her set leaned into steady grooves and melodic house selections, favoring flow over sharp peaks. Tracks like ‘Simple Things by Vito & Marian’ and ‘Lift Your Heart by Daniel Steinberg’ helped define that direction, keeping things warm and accessible while holding the dance floor together.
Around 8 PM, there was a subtle but clear moment where the floor locked in. A sequence of deeper, more driving cuts added weight to the set, drawing more people in while maintaining the overall tone of the evening.
There is a patience in how she builds. Her background, shaped by jazz and years of global influence, comes through in the pacing. Transitions are given space, and the set unfolds as a continuous thread rather than a series of highlights.
At Soho Beach House, that approach works. The venue invites both movement and conversation, and her selections allowed both to exist without conflict. The crowd stayed engaged, moving between the dance floor and surrounding areas, with a steady presence near the booth as the night progressed.
Her track selection sat between classic house sensibility and a more current melodic edge. It remained on the restrained side, but with enough motion to carry the room through. This was not about big moments or heavy impact, but about maintaining a mood that fit the setting and the crowd, and in that sense, it delivered.
With upcoming appearances at Esmé Hotel and Do Not Sit On The Furniture, Marie Posa continues to build her presence in Miami with a style centered on control and continuity.












