Rave On: Electric Daisy Carnival Still Packs a Day-Glo Punch

LA’s annual Electric Daisy Carnival kept true to its eccentric tradition and ensured that this year’s event was larger, louder, and less organized than ever before. If you were one of the 55,000 in attendance who had to stand in lines for three hours of security check as staff went to great lengths to fish out glow sticks and drug paraphernalia before giving up and letting people just walk in, and an hour delay in the set times at most, if not all of the stages, then you earned your right to be there.

Thousands of neon clad concert goers packed the historic Los Angeles Coliseum to catch a glimpse of some of electro music’s biggest. Despite the long lines – supposedly caused my an unexpectedly large turnout – and the absence of the highly anticipated Berlin-based Boys Noize, who missed the show due to an undisclosed illness, fans were still treated to a number of fantastic sets. After a strong start on the main stage on the Coliseum field, Italian DJ Benny Benassi seemed to fizzle towards the end of his set, but his less than stellar finale was quickly forgotten when Moby took the stage. It’s been long enough since everyone’s favorite bald vegan DJ’d a rave in California, some were skeptical about what his performance would bring. Thankfully, his high energy set, coupled with his typical audience interaction and a surprise fireworks show, proved to be the highlight of the night.

There wasn’t a dull moment, the best sets coming from Classixx, Z-Trip, and Shinichi Osawa, who shone at his first U.S. appearance that night.

Some side stage highlights came from the “Cosmic Meadow,” where everyone from Armand Van Helden to Harry Romero got everyone moving, and the “Circuit Field,” where Freestylers and DJ Dan spun the crowd into a frenzy. This year’s underdog was the Bass Pod stage, riddled with trouble (that’s where Boys Noize was to have played) and musical criticism for upstart locals Paparazzi and Le Castle Vania. Despite the negativity, there wasn’t a dull moment, the best sets coming from Classixx, Z-Trip, and Shinichi Osawa, who shone at his first U.S. appearance that night.

The best way to enjoy the event was to roam around. Since most sets overlapped anyway it was worth the walk to catch a glimpse of everyone, and prevented you from getting bored too quickly; most of the sets shared the same elements, so traveling around kept it stimulating. It also invited a chance to run into friends or make new ones, as throngs of teens clad in neon fur, skimpy underwear and craft store bracelets mingled and posed for photos. After all, being seen is what these events are for.

Words: David Bond & Tim McLaughlin

moby
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images by Insomniac

Live review: Unexhausted Sundaze at SB3, New York City

“I don’t know if you know this, but I’m a little drunk.” Globetrotting DJ/producer Lenny Dee, who helms the respected Brooklyn-based Industrial Strength Records, confided these words after playing a set of house and obscure cuts (including one from Nancy Sinatra!) at Unexhausted Sundaze on Sunday night. Known for his ferocious, big room sets in Europe, this techno titan doesn’t normally get to play for a small room.

On a day when most people kick back and unwind (especially when the weather outside is so damn nice), Mr. Dee was able to play tunes that don’t fit into his typical DJ sets. I’m not exactly sure how it happened, but Unexhausted Sundaze also featured Aaron Liberator, Mark Verbos, John Selway and Shimmer & Stumble on the bill. These world-class DJs had the run of the cozy two-level bar (though we couldn’t vouch for their sobriety), and techno never sounded so good on the seventh day of the week. Unexhausted Sundaze made Monday morning a little less grim for a change.

Lenny Dee
Lenny Dee in the midst of dropping a Nancy Sinatra track (for real!)
Mark Verbos
Mr. Mark Verbos
John Selway
John Selway in the house
Shimmer & Stumble
Shimmer & Stumble: Obviously unaware of NYC’s no smoking rule.
Lenny Dee dancing
Lenny Dee: A dynamo in the DJ booth and the dance floor!

photos courtesy of Jules

Live review: Gatecrasher Summer Sound System 2008

Gatecrasher Summer Sound System was billed as the UK’s “biggest ever electronic music event,” and there was more anticipation in dance music circles leading up to the event than there is for the American presidential elections. In fact, political correctness, as well as the political landscape, couldn’t have been further from the minds of the crowd. With acts such as the Prodigy, Tom Middleton, John 00 Fleming, Mauro Picotto, Paul Van Dyk, Josh Wink, Armand Van Helden, The Chemical Brothers, Pendulum, Hot Chip, Soulwax, Mark Ronson, Chicane, Paul Oakenfeld and Dizzee Rascal on the bill, there was certainly no shortage of musical talent.

Held in the somewhat bleak surroundings of Turweston Aerodrome, setting up the festival had been a quite an enterprise. With massive marquees dotted across the field like giant palace shaped mushrooms, and cars and tents parked and camped as far as the eye could see, a large audience was expected. However, sunshine is one thing that festival organizers cannot bank on in the English “summer,” and despite the glossy advertising paraphernalia featuring blue skies, the weather was average from the start.

This was a festival in two parts. The first day was an extravagant assault on the senses, with a mixture of laser beams, booming sound systems, a diverse range of artists and DJs, and a crowd practically jumping with excitement despite the somewhat insipid weather, providing all the entertainment that you could have wished for. The second day was an entirely different proposition altogether. The weather had been threatening to break on the first day, and the wind was so strong that many tents had been flattened to the ground. Indeed, erecting my tent could hardly have been described as fun. The wind had been buffering my tent so much that until I finally managed to hammer tent-pegs into the ground, the tent actually more closely resembled a parachute. At one stage during high winds, I was lucky not to be lifted into the air, which would have been as natural a high as one could expect at a dance music festival.

Grass and pathways in the campsite were transformed into mud, and the campsite looked more like a tropical war zone than a festival campsite.

While wind is one thing, heavy rain an entirely different problem for campers. As the sickened masses awoke on the Sunday morning, it was clear to everyone that Wellies and ponchos were necessities as the rain alternatively tumbled, drizzled, and blew down. Grass and pathways in the campsite were transformed into mud, and the campsite looked more like a tropical war zone than a festival campsite. However, it was testament to the festival’s revelers that spirits were dampened, and as the afternoon wore onto the evening the excitement levels grew again. The differing wind patterns did have one thing going for them – the peculiar and somewhat rancid smell being blown in from a neighboring chicken farm did appear to ease.

The mood of the sodden crowd into the early evening of Sunday was not helped by the bad communication from the festival organizers regarding the late cancellation of the major acts The Chemical Brothers and Hot Chip apparently due to insurance issues related to potential rain-damage and the fact that the bands didn’t want to relocate to other stages. In general, it was nigh on impossible to work out which act or DJ was playing at each tent as cancellations and delays made the festival a logistical nightmare. The packed tents for the more popular acts spilt out into the open air and sundry rain, not a pleasant experience for those unlucky not to be inside.

Any festival with as good a line-up as Gatecrasher has its high points, and it was the old school powerhouses of dance music that provided the bulk of the entertainment for the audience.

Chaotic was the only way to describe the Sunday and unfortunately put a black mark against the event (as did the tragic death from a reported drug overdose of a male on the Saturday morning, although arguably this was out of the hands of the festival’s organizers).

Any festival with as good a line-up as Gatecrasher has its high points, and it was the old school powerhouses of dance music that provided the bulk of the entertainment for the audience. Chicane was particularly talented, and took me back to the glory days of dance music in the late 1990s. Most of the top DJs put on great shows, in particular Armand Van Helden and Paul Van Dyk, but some of the less trancyacts were also impressive such as Dizzee Rascal and Yoda’s Magic Cinema Show who is surely one of the more eccentric DJ’s that you can see. One of the newer dance music bands is Pendulum who hail from Perth, Australia, and they definitely delivered a mix of rock and drum ‘n’ bass. Pendulum relocated to one of the smaller tents and were only one of the main acts to perform on the Sunday; they definitely rewarded the crowd’s patience with a great show. DJ Marky also played a great set.

As the rain continued to fall into the early morning of Monday, it was clear that this was not a festival for non-campers. Faced with walking tracks fit for mud-wrestling, soggy tents, and “festive”-toilets, it was probably only the most-enthused festival attendee who didn’t have their spirits dampened at some point during the weekend.

As I packed up on the Monday morning, I happened upon a more apt for next year’s festival: Gatecrasher Wet.

Words: Tim Kernutt

DEMF 2008 Scores with Good Weather, More Variety




Techno festivals may be commonplace in Europe, where Sonar, Love Parade and the like rule the summer circuit, but they’re a rare breed here in North America; but what America lacks in variety is more than made up for with quality. Detroit Electronic Music Festival – dubbed Movement in recent years – is an annual throwdown that has been taking place every Memorial Day weekend since 2000, bringing legends like Richie Hawtin and Carl Craig shoulder to shoulder with up-and-coming artists in an effort to pay homage to the Motor City’s pivotal role in the genre’s creation. This year featured the highest production quality of any edition of the festival yet, and generated the event’s highest turnout as well, passing well beyond the 75,000 mark.

Barring a solitary rain shower on Monday, the three-day weekend was blessed with gorgeous weather, a welcome relief for those who were met with thunderstorms and stifling humidity in 2007, and it set the festivities off on the right foot. Saturday morning started slowly, as Tycho delivered a blessed-out set of IDM at the Beatport tent and a crowd of ravers basked in Echospace’s echo-laden dub techno at the Vitamin Water stage. After that, it was full throttle straight through Monday night, as throbbing minimal techno – complete with an ace M_nus showcase featuring Richie Hawtin (below, left), Magda (below, right) and Heartthrob – sleek house and bumping hip-hop grooves pounded eardrums to a pulp and left many a pair of dancing feet bruised and broken.

Of course, the weekend wasn’t all blue skies and good times. Paxahau, the Detroit-based promoter primarily responsible for piecing Movement together, managed to pull in their record numbers this year with a less techno-centric line-up than usual that included acts like Girl Talk, Peanut Butter Wolf and Moby. The result: occasionally awkward vibes and a smattering of confused looking people who had come along expecting the low-slung hip-hop of the Cool Kids but were met with driving 4/4 techno blaring from every direction.

The promoters also went full-tilt with corporate sponsorship, fully embracing product placement from longtime sponsors like Beatport and Vitamin Water, while bringing fresh blood to the table like MySpace. Considering Paxahau’s penchant for plastering banners on every available surface, there was little room to turn without being smacked in the face with another advert; even the stages were rechristened with the monikers of the highest bidders. It created an atmosphere that lacked the soul of past events, while hopefully offering the benefit of allowing the festival to grow and ensure its future.

These are minor grievances, to be sure. At its core, the festival was yet another in an unbroken string of great successes for Paxahau, and proof positive why so many people return, year after year, to the bombed out shell of a city that is Detroit to spend their Memorial Day weekend partying in the Birthplace of Techno. Long live Movement!

Words: Carl Ritger
Images: Micah Weiss