Archive for the ‘Ibiza Nightclubs’ Category

Electronic dance music artist Steve Smith whips up wicked beats

Its been a decade now since the rise of Dirty Vegas and Days Go By, the international house music smash that jumped to renown thanks to its placement on radio and in a Mitsubishi Eclipse commercial.

But fans of cultishly beloved musical acts tend to have long memories, so when the British house trio plotted a much-anticipated comeback two years ago, the response was massive.

2011 was a crazy year, Dirty Vegas frontman Steve Smith said. We reformed the band, we put out an album [Electric Love] on Om Records, a West Coast label well known to electronic musicians. That was an amazing success we hit Top 5 on the iTunes dance chart and we had songs from the album featured in everything from HBO shows to Lucasfilm productions and Heineken commercials. We toured the world again, too.

The last time we caught up with Smith, whos lived in Scituate, Mass., for the better part of a decade now with his wife and daughters, was 2008. By then, he was three years removed from an amicable split with bandmates Ben Harris and Paul Harris and was releasing a solo album, This Town.

Fast forward a few more years however, and Dirty Vegas is not only back together but Smith has more solo work in the can, with another album now in production.

But about that Dirty Vegas reunion: with so much having changed in the music industry even between 2005 and 2011, Smith and his mates were wondering if thered still be an appetite for the band. The answer, Smith found, was far and wide.

Music travels farther than ever before you can share it immediately with anyone with a Wi-Fi connection, he said. So we had requests coming in from places like Macau crazy spots wed never been to before. In Beijing, people were outside our gig with posters to sign. It was really good. The first time wed toured the world heavily, it was a whirlwind. This time we really got a grasp of being onstage in all these places, thousands of miles from home and having people know the music.

Smith will spend most of July away, starting with dates in Brazil, but things will settle down a bit more next month when he plays some live shows from his solo project.

Its been bubbling away for a while now, and this year it felt right to do it, he said of the new album, for which he recently traveled to Spanish party island Ibiza for inspiration.

I lived in Ibiza many years ago. Its a very creative place, Smith said. "Dirty Vegas has always been big energy, anthemic-type songs. These are a little bit quieter. Theres an electronic pulse to them but theyre not really 2 a.m. type songs more sitting around the pool type things.

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Electronic dance music artist Steve Smith whips up wicked beats

Cara Delevingne and Cressida Bonas lead London’s hottest new style tribe – the Sloane Ravers

The Sloane Ravers include Cara Delevingne and Cressida Bonas They might be from Belgravia but there's no pearls or tweed in sight Other names in the gang include Sophia Hesketh and Lady Mary Furze

By Ruth Styles

PUBLISHED: 09:03 EST, 14 July 2013 | UPDATED: 10:38 EST, 14 July 2013

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Once Sloanes wore Alice bands, pearls and spent the weekends traipsing around the family estate, faithful spaniel in tow. Not anymore.

The Sloane Ranger has evolved into the Sloane Raver: posh, pretty and with plans to party hard - wherever in the world they might be.

Led by the Delevingne sisters, Poppy and Cara, London's coolest new style tribe have upstaged Dalson's hipsters; swapping the girls in pearls stereotype for neon shorts and bovver boots, and their spaniels for Harry Styles.

So who are the Sloane Ravers? Femail makes the introductions.

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Cara Delevingne and Cressida Bonas lead London's hottest new style tribe - the Sloane Ravers

It’s party time for loved-up Argos speed king Kittel

High and drei: Germany's Marcel Kittel celebrates his hat-trick

If there's a crash in the final few kilometres in this Tour de France then you can be sure that Marcel Kittel will be there to mop up the pieces and take the win.

Following victories on the opening day in Bastia and on Tuesday in Saint-Malo, the Argos-Shimano speedster secured his hat-trick in Tours with the best yet: a head-to-head win over the fastest urinal on two wheels, Mark Cavendish.

Before the Tour, Argos-Shimano made a series of videos with each of their riders giving a glimpse at "the person behind the rider".

Kittel's video is particularly interesting. You find out how he was initially a time triallist who was brought into the team as a lead-out man - but then started winning sprints, including four in the Tour of Poland in 2011.

"My goals for this year are simple," Kittel - dressed in a white t-shirt, denim jacket and trademark quiffed hair - says. "I want to be successful on the Tour. I want to come out of the Tour with a stage win, and when I think further I would like to take advantage of every possibility that I get as a sprinter to achieve success."

Well, the first is a given: Kittel has been an unqualified success on this Tour. He's been a success because he has three of what he was targeting - stage wins - and to achieve this success, he had indeed taken advantage of every scrap coming his way.

In stage one it was that huge pile-up that occurred just as the Orica-GreenEdge bus was extricating itself from the finish line gantry. In stage 10 it was a crash to his lead-out man Tom Veelers and the subsequent slowing of Cavendish. In stage 12 it was the nasty bike-tangle that did for three of Andre Greipel's Lotto train while holding up the Gorilla in the ensuing melee.

But saying Kittel only wins when his rivals are picking themselves up off the ground is doing the highly affable 25-year-old a huge disservice. Sure, Bastia was rather fortunate, but Saint-Malo required Kittel to come from behind to beat his country's national champion.

Then Tours on Thursday was the pick of the bunch: not only coming from behind to beat Cavendish, but to beat a Cavendish fired up by the lingering smell of urine in his nose, a Cavendish with a point to prove after his previous clash with Tom Veelers and the Argos train.

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It’s party time for loved-up Argos speed king Kittel

Electric Daisy Chain: Insomniac and Dick Clark Prod. Plan 2014 EDM Awards

David Guetta at Electric Daisy Carnival, Chicago , 2013 / Daniel Boczarski/Getty Images

Can a neon entertainment behemoth and "America's Oldest Teenager," Inc. succeed where the Grammys failed?

If you thought that what the world of electronic dance music really needed was more pomp, circumstance, and self-congratulation, well, you're in luck. At Las Vegas' EDMbiz conference this week, Insomniac, the promoter behind the Electric Daisy Carnival, announced a partnership with Dick Clark Productions to produce a dance-music awards show to coincide with the 2014 edition of the festival.

This isn't entirely surprising news; Billboard reports that DCP had previously expressed interest in launching a dance-music awards show. Given the amount of cash being pumped into the EDM marketplace and the absence of any major, mainstream awards ceremonies in the sector it was a vacuum just waiting to be filled. Nevertheless, the move is a head-scratcher on numerous levels, beginning with Insomniac's partner in the venture.

Not to speak ill of the dead, but Dick Clark, who passed away last year, is hardly a figure one associates with the future of youth culture, despite his nickname as "America's Oldest Teenager." On the contrary, his 40-year reign as the unofficial host of New Year's Eve was pretty much synonymous with old-media monoculture.

Dick Clark Productions isn't limited to its late figurehead, of course, but you still wonder how well a company headed by the chairman of the TV Guide Network is going to understand dance-music culture. Founded in 1957 and now co-owned by the financial-services firm Guggenheim Partners, the sports and entertainment company Mandalay Entertainment, and Mosaic Media Investment Partners, DCP continues to produce awards shows like the American Music Awards, the Academy of Country Music Awards, and the Golden Globe Awards, none of which have a reputation for being particularly edgy, despite Ricky Gervais' best efforts. Of last year's AMAs, SPIN wrote, "The 2012 American Music Awards raved lamely through its EDM-iest ceremony ever Sunday night [November 18], surprising none with its predictable performances and new crop of old winners."

Insomniac also doesn't seem like the outfit best suited for recognizing exceptional talent in electronic music. Insomniac founder Pasquale Rotella has long made it clear that the artists he books are, in some sense, incidental. The term "headliner," in EDC-speak, is reserved for the fans themselves, and he has praised Burning Man as a festival with "no talent" that is, an event where there are no stars besides the attendees themselves. At last summer's EDMbiz conference, he boasted, "Our strategy moving forward is we don't want to book the [big] guys I don't want to be a promoter. My passion is not selling tickets and making money. I want to create an experience. You don't need to book the big acts who sell out arenas."

Of course, Insomniac does book the big guys: This year's lineup is top-heavy with acts like Tisto, Avicii,Afrojack, Steve Angello, Calvin Harris, Armin van Buuren, Above & Beyond, and many of their Top 100 DJs Poll cohorts. And, as the Los Angeles Times' August Brown wrote of this year's edition of EDC, "With a lot of venues and fests making EDM available to Southern Californians all year round, the acts at Las Vegas' fest aren't new and exciting." True, Insomniac does recognize emerging artists in the form of its Discovery Project talent search (although it relegates them to a separate stage, and winners of its EDC London edition are even responsible for their own travel arrangements). And, true, the festival's lineup this year is more diverse than in years past, thanks in part to co-branded bookings at its Neongarden stage with Richie Hawtin, Carl Cox, and Damian Lazarus, all presenting talent that could be considered left-field in the context of EDC's main-stage offerings.

But there's a huge swath of electronic dance music that isn't represented at Insomniac events, and not just because it's too "underground" (a code word, in mainstream EDM, for club music that doesn't pander). Insomniac and EDC acknowledge the diversity of electronic styles to a certain extent this weekend's bill includes hip-hop legend Just Blaze, trap enigma UZ, and Chicago house pioneer Green Velvet but those tend to be exceptions to the rule. As middle-of-the-road as Ibiza may be (and as much as Vegas clamors to be the new Ibiza), the White Isle is much more representative of dance music's complicated array of scenes and sounds and niches-within-niches. (Stateside, HARD fest and even Ultra Music Fest have done a better job than EDC of acknowledging styles and subcultures that lie beyond the borders of Kandi-land.)

Insomniac is clearly bent upon cornering as much of the EDM market as it can. And, given the Live Nation partnershipthat Rotella confirmed this week rumored to be a $50 million deal giving Live Nation a 50 percent stake in Rotella's company that could become a very big corner indeed. Last year, the company created the EDMbiz conference, modeled after the Winter Music Conference of yore, Amsterdam Dance Event, and Pete Tong's International Music Summit in Ibiza, as a way of lending professional gravitas (and luring suits) to a Vegas affair otherwise swimming in glitter and tutus; it has also built up "EDC Week" as a week-long stretch of pool parties and club nights surrounding its flagship event, in an attempt to reinforce Vegas as the epicenter of American club culture. And Insomniac's efforts reach far beyond the Southwest; its holdings include numerous festivals across the country (Nocturnal Wonderland, Beyond Wonderland, Escape from Wonderland, White Wonderland, Autiotistic, Bassrush, and Electric Forest). It also has a hand in the Los Angeles nightclubs Create and Exchange L.A.. This year, EDC is even heading overseas, putting on its first-ever London edition in partnership with Cream a company recently acquired, as you may recall, by Live Nation.

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Electric Daisy Chain: Insomniac and Dick Clark Prod. Plan 2014 EDM Awards

Get the ELLE Ibiza app

#Nofilter fun: you need this

Ibiza

Whether its your first time on the White Isle or youre an Ibiza regular, ELLE's insider app has everything you need to make this your best summer there - ever.

Think the hidden hideaways, coolest clubs and best beaches - the ones you wont find in typical travel guides. As well as the obvious draw of some of the best nightclubs in the world, the Mediterranean clubbing capital has a beautiful coastline with dozens of tiny coves to discover, not to mention some of the most stylish hotels in the world. Sick of San Antonios infamous strip or just fancy a change? It was a tough job but weve hunted down some of the chicest cocktail bars and laid-back boozers for chill out nights, romantic dates and pre-drinks with a difference. Available to download now for just 69p, the ELLE app means you can impress your friends by taking them to discover some of the islands best kept secrets. That's a bargain if ever we've seen one. Start plotting your summer of fun now - and be sure to follow our live ELLE Ibiza takeover, as of today.

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