Archive for the ‘Ibiza Rave’ Category

Bringing down the house

The last weekend of a bumper month still sees a buzz of clubbing activity, not to mention the coming weeks.

ADVANCE WARNING

JULY 12

SULTAN LOUNGE

Mandarin Oriental Kuala Lumpur

Jalan Pinang, Kuala Lumpur City Centre, KL

HED KANDI Beach House Party. Summer is in the air. The worlds most fashionable name and best selling house music label, Hed Kandi, is back, as Sultan and Oscar Wise bring in the Hed Kandi Beach House party, the official summer party by Hed Kandi Party for its Kuala Lumpur Series, in conjunction with Hed Kandis 10 year anniversary residency in Ibiza and its worldwide release of sun kissed summer grooves. Witness an exclusive collaboration of rising artistes, featuring a returning DJ Stu Ojelay (UK) and, for the first time in Malaysia, the unique Miss A. Kay (UK) live on saxophone, supported by the Oscar Wise Disco Sound System: Gregoire Pagnoux, with Dean Richards and a special opening set performance by Ushera on vocals. Admission (with one drink): RM50. Reservations, call Sultan Lounge manager Yacine 017-226 7955.

JULY 11

KL LIVE @ LIFE CENTRE

18, Jalan Sultan Ismail, KL

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Bringing down the house

Rave Mobile Safety Issues Safety Tips for Fourth of July

FRAMINGHAM, Mass., June 28, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --From backyard barbecues to a day at the beach to a night taking in fireworks, people across the U.S. enjoy every possible summer past-time as they celebrate the Fourth of July. It is also one of the single busiest days of the year for 9-1-1 responders and hospital emergency rooms. According to public safety experts at Rave Mobile Safety, the trusted software partner for campus and public safety, the following tips can help minimize risk and ensure safe summer fun this Independence Day.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120409/NE83750LOGO)

Rave Mobile Safety also urges citizens to join Smart911, a public/private partnership endorsed nationwide by leading public safety and health officials. This rapidly growing service is now helping emergency responders across 22 states protect millions of citizens. Smart911 allows citizens to create a Safety Profile online at http://www.smart911.com that is automatically displayed to 9-1-1 during emergency calls.This can include home addresses associated with mobile phone numbers, medical conditions and disabilities, photos of family members, floor-plans and other rescue-related data.

This information enables emergency responders to have a comprehensive understanding of the scene before they arrive. EMS will know about medical conditions, allergies and disabilities, facilitating precise life-saving treatment. Fire crews will know not only how many residents are at a home, but locations of bedrooms, residents with special needs and even if there are pets on-premise. Police will have instant access to a child's personal information and a photograph if a child goes missing.

To see if Smart911 is in your community, please check the website. Even if it has not yet been deployed, it likely will be soon, and a destination you're visiting on July 4 may already be protected by Smart911.

About Rave Mobile Safety

Rave Mobile Safety is the most trusted software partner for campus and public safety. Used by leading Institutes of Higher Education and State and Local Agencies, the award-winning portfolio of RaveAlert, RaveGuardian, Eyewitness and Smart911 enables millions to feel safe, secure and connected. Rave Mobile Safety is headquartered in Framingham, MA. For more information please visit http://www.ravemobilesafety.com

Contact:Marty Querzoli Davies Murphy Group pr@ravemobilesafety.com (781) 418-2433

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Rave Mobile Safety Issues Safety Tips for Fourth of July

Live Nation Acquires L.A. EDM Promoter HARD: Will the Mainstream Get More Ravey?

Major Lazer from HARD Haunted Mansion 2011 / Photo by Erik Voake

Earlier this month, the media baron Robert F.X. Sillerman made waves in the electronic dance music scene when the New York Times reported his plans to spend $1 billion buying up local and regional dance-music promoters in the effort to create an entertainment behemoth to rival Live Nation, a company formed out of Sillerman's previous holdings. But he'd better act fast: Live Nation seems determined to snap up the goods first. Last month the company acquired England's Cream, the mega-brand behind club nights in Ibiza and Liverpool as well as Creamfields festivals around the globe, and yesterday it announced its acquisition of Los Angeles' HARD Events, the company responsible for dance-music events like HARD Summer and HARD Haunted Mansion, the New York Times reported late yesterday.

Until now, Live Nation's ventures in electronic dance music have focused mostly on tours by artists like Avicii and Kaskade as well as the Identity Festival, a tour featuring Arty, Datsik, Doctor P, Eric Prydz, Paul van Dyk, Porter Robinson, Wolfgang Gartner and others slated for 15 cities across North America this summer. The addition of HARD to Live Nation's roster gives the publicly traded company's dance-music division a key foothold in Southern California, one of the United States' strongest markets for electronic dance music, as well as outposts in HARD stomping grounds Toronto, Miami, and New York and, for that matter, on the high seas, thanks to HARD's Holy Ship!, a Caribbean electro cruise. According to the Times, Live Nation intends to expand HARD to further markets, but plans have yet to be confirmed.

While HARD's balance sheet was probably Live Nation's primary interest, the L.A. festival's left-of-center brand might have been an added enticement. Interestingly, while pop-palatable artists like David Guetta and Avicii have driven much of the media coverage of America's current EDM-fatuation, HARD's lineups have typically skewed slightly more underground than rival events like Electric Daisy Carnival or the Identity Festival: Performers on this year's lineup include Squarepusher, James Murphy, Little Dragon, Claude VonStroke and even John Talabot, along with Skrillex, A-Trak, Nero and other staples of EDM's biggest marquees.

In an interview last year, HARD founder Gary Richards told me that variety has always been an essential element of his events. Of HARD's inaugural edition, he said, "Going into it, I knew that I didn't want it to be a rave. I didn't want it to just be a place for young kids to do stupidness, and I wanted the music to be quality. I wanted to show people that, hey, there's a lot of electronic music, different genres and a lot of quality. It doesn't have to be the same trance guys that have been coming to L.A. for the past 20 years."

Richards, who also DJs and produces under the name Destructo, has been throwing events in Southern California since the early 1990s. With a promoter named Mr. Kool-Aid, he produced the original Electric Daisy Carnival; the name was later taken on by Los Angeles promoter Pasquale Rotella for the festival's current incarnation. After a stint at Rick Rubin's Def American label in the era of the Prodigy and Lords of Acid as well as a detour through heavy metal, managing bands like Slipknot, Mudvayne and Hatebreed with his late brother Richards launched HARD in 2007.

"In 2005 or 2006, I just realized that putting out records, selling CDs, it's like trying to sell air to people," Richards told me last year. "They're free, this is a joke. So why don't I go back to my roots of DJing and producing an event? And I started HARD. Our first event was Justice, Peaches, 2 Live Crew, Aoki, A-Trak, Whitey, Busy P, all that stuff, when it was really brand new. So for once, after almost 20 years, my timing was good. In this world, it's all about the timing. If you're too far ahead, it doesn't really matter."

"I was on the Prodigy 10 years too early," admitted Richards in an interview with SPIN in April. "I was always just too early. As cool as it is to be like, 'I know about this really cool thing,' if the climate or whatever else is going on in the world at the time doesn't line up, then you're screwed. But it's funny, Rick [Rubin] told me, 'The cream rises to the top.' At the end of the day, the good shit always gets out there, and he was right. It just took a long time to boil that pot."

For skeptics who doubt that corporate consolidation will be of lasting benefit to fans and artists, it remains to be seen whether another culinary metaphor might be appropriate: That of too many cooks in the kitchen. Ironically, just two months ago, Richards took a dim view of the industry feeding frenzy, telling the New York Times, "You can't just franchise this like McDonald's."

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Live Nation Acquires L.A. EDM Promoter HARD: Will the Mainstream Get More Ravey?

Street press publisher predicts industry demise

An issue of Rave Magazine from 1998, left, and from 2012. The magazine's publisher announced yesterday it would close.

The days of picking up your favourite street press publication around the streets of Brisbane are numbered. Soon they'll all be gone.

That's the assessment of Scene magazine publisher Howard Duggan in the wake of Rave Magazine's closure this week.

The director of the publication's parent business Eyeball Media had no problems speaking frankly about the future of the industry which he believed could only be online - battling for advertising in a heavily populated sphere of operation.

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Scene magazine.

"It is a sad but inevitable day," Mr Duggan said.

"It has been clear for quite a few years that the writing has been on the walls for print and it is simply a matter of time when all the titles are gone and the order that they disappear is of no consequence."

Rave Magazine publisher Colin Rankin closed the publication on Tuesday after almost 21 years of operation and 1047 issues.

Mr Rankin told brisbanetimes.com.au a decline in print advertising revenue was the catalyst for the move with the industry beset by the same problems as major metropolitan newspapers.

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Street press publisher predicts industry demise

Beat Boys: The Rise of the Superstar DJ

Jeff Kravitz / FilmMagic / Getty Images

Skrillex performs onstage during Day 3 of Bonnaroo 2012 on June 9, 2012 in Manchester, Tennessee.

Name a DJ from the 1980s. Go ahead, well wait. Fast forward to the 2012 Grammy Awards when electronic music and the men (more on that later) who make it were everywhere. Deadmau5 showed up on the red carpet wearing his trademark mouse head with Skrillexs phone number scrawled across his t-shirt. Producer and DJ Skrillex won not one, but three Grammys. In a special performance superstar DJ David Guetta brought the beats while Lil Wayne and Chris Brown provided vocals.

Far from being a niche market, electronic dance music (EDM) is making inroads into almost every aspect of American life. It has fully infiltrated Top 40 radio. French DJ extraordinaire David Guetta hit No. 1 with the Black Eyed Peas on I Gotta Feeling and Rihanna worked with Scottish DJ Calvin Harris on her hits We Found Love and Where Have You Been. Chart-toppers by Gotye and Adele have been endlessly remixed into dance hits. Deadmau5, both the person and his music, are featured in commercials. Atlantic Records recently relaunched Big Beat, its dance-music imprint, with Skrillex as its cornerstone. The Wall Street Journal estimated that Dutch superstar DJTisto MixMagsGreatest DJ of All Time has an annual income of $20 million. Attendance at the Electric Daisy Carnival, one of the premiere electronic music festivals in the U.S., topped 250,000 last year. Forbes considers Skrillex the 92nd most powerful celebrity in the world, making their list right above 30 Rocks Tina Fey. The rise of the DJ as an artist and the ascension of electronic dance music to the mainstream seems unstoppable.

But just as we are all getting used to having DJs making the music scene, a few acts start to signal what could be the beginning of the end of this generation of electronic dance music mavens. Two days ago, Deadmau5, one of the most famous (and intentionally controversial) DJs of the era, posted an article on Tumblr entitled We All Hit Play. In the article, Deadmau5 (born Joel Zimmerman) claimed that anyone given about 1 hour of instruction can be a DJ, no talent required. He also alleged that when fans pay to see dance musics top-billed acts (himself included) play live its little more than watching them hit play on a mix tape. Then, Swedish House Mafia announced that the tour they are about to go on will be their last. Together the Swedes Axwell, Steve Angello and Sebastian Ingrosso sometimes referred to as the Holy Trinity of Dance, are one of dance musics most commercially successful brands and the group was at the front of EDMs American invasion. While the statement was worded vaguely enough for skeptics to wonder if the powerhouse trio would simply change their name, it was a surprising move for one of EDMs biggest acts that will headline a show in Milton Keynes Bowl in England next month. The venue holds 65,000 people. So why are they leaving the game now?

(MORE: Justin Biebers Believe: The Pop Prince Comes of Age)

Are we at a tipping point for electronic music? Maybe. But lets start at the beginning. When did the ascension of EDM in America start? When did it become a phenomenon that would allow a DJ (Deadmau5 again) to close out the Lollapalooza festival or pack a coliseum? Electronic music has been around for awhile. William Orbit was making a name for himself on the dance music scene for more than a decade before becoming known to audiences worldwide for his work on Madonnas 1998 album Ray Of Light. Dutch DJ Tisto has been performing since the mid 1980s, spinning prerecorded music and creating mixes in clubs before headlining Ultra Music Festival last year and raking in the estimated $20 million income. The electronica boom of the late 90s produced artists like Moby, Fatboy Slim and the Chemical Brothers. The Prodigy even managed to produce a No. 1 album Fat of the Land in 1997 that became one of the fastest-selling UK albums of all time.

But earlier iterations of electronic music followed the well-laid track of rock music. They were short, fast and to the point as EDM chronicler Phillip Sherburne says, a dance-music DJ needs hours, not minutes, to get across his or her ideas. Luckily, dance music grew from those early days. While the rave and dance party scene had always been present in Europe, in the 80s and 90s dance music in America was a relatively underground scene. But slowly attendance at festivals like Miamis Winter Music Conference, which was founded in 1985; the Detroit Electronic Music Festival, which started in 2000; and Montreals MUTEK began to grow by the tens of thousands. Indie electronica took off in the new millennium. Acts like Justice from France, Lali Puna from Germany, and Ratatat and The Postal Service from the US paired the soft niceties of indie rock with an foot-pounding electronic beat and helped ignite a new interest in the genre, kickstarting a nostalgia for bands like the Chemical Brothers and, of course, Daft Punk.

Daft Punks groundbreaking set at the Coachella Music and Arts Festival back in 2006 was the defining moment for the new wave of dance music in America. While the duos debut album, Homework, came out in 1997, their turn on the Coachella stage was perfectly timed for American interests. You can watch parts of the performance on YouTube, but the videos only capture the tip of the iceberg, or, more aptly, the tip of the giant light-up pyramid that filled the stage. Daft Punks futuristic sound and wild set made waves at Coachella by tapping into a zeitgeist of music that combined a nostalgia for 90s acts with a burgeoning American dance music scene fueled by crossover indie dance bands like LCD Soundsystem and !!! . That was life-changing for me, said Steve Goodgold, the dance music specialist at the Windish Agency, a booking agency, speaking to the LA Times. Coachella promoter Goldenvoices Senior Vice President Skip Paige agreed. We built that tent for Madonna, and she phoned it in. Daft Punk used it all and blew us away. I talked to them afterwards and they said it was the best set theyd ever played. The performance by the robot-costumed Frenchmen brought cynical concert-goers to tears and the notoriously compliment-stingy site Pitchfork called the performance mindblowing.

(MORE: De La Soul Duos First Serve: Hip-hop Made Fun Again)

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Beat Boys: The Rise of the Superstar DJ