Archive for the ‘Ibiza Rave’ Category

Londoners re-live rave days with kids

By Alice Ritchie

The bass is pumping, the lights are low and the dance floor of the club is heaving. It's the weekend and the young man is enjoying himself - until someone steals his balloon.

Dressed in a Spiderman outfit, the four-year-old boy runs to his dad by the bar to complain, before receiving a glow-stick in consolation.

Such are the highs and lows of family raving, a new craze fuelled by London's ex-clubbers who still want to go dancing but now have kids in tow.

"What a genius idea - beer, raving, children. What more could you want?" said Paul Crawley, 34, swaying slowly on the dance floor carrying his baby daughter Camille in a sling.

"The worst thing is I was invited out last night, but I said no, I've got to stay sober for this party."

This dingy bar in south London is normally the venue for all-night raves, but for two-and-a-half hours on a Saturday afternoon, it is transformed into a playgroup with a difference.

In the chillout area, mums breastfeed on low leather sofas to a soundtrack of soft rock, while older children paint and draw at a well-equipped craft table under moving projected images.

The bar is well stocked and next door, professional DJs play chilled house music, funk and drum'n'bass at a surprisingly loud volume, although organisers insist it is safe for babies' ears.

The undisputed king of the dance floor is Caelan, a fleet-footed five-year-old wearing impeccable white trainers.

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Londoners re-live rave days with kids

Easter 2014: weekend parties and clubs in London

Mulletover Tenth Birthday

Pulse

Legendary house and techno night mulletover, which started as an underground rave where you had to call a number on the night to find the venue, turns ten this year. While it may have gone a bit more mainstream in that time, you can still expect a heady blend of underground beats.

Pulse, 1 Invicta Plaza, South Bank, SE1 9UF, 15, 10pm-8am, mulletover.co.uk

Magna Carta

Great Suffolk Street Warehouse

Popular underground house and techno night Magna Carta takes over the cavernous Great Suffolk Street Warehouse for an Easter special, the first of three shows this year. German deep house and techno producer Nick Curly tops the bill with support from Ibiza resident Marc Antona, Berlins Sidney Charles and many more.

Great Suffolk Street Warehouse, 29 Great Suffolk Street, SE1 0NS, 17.50, 10pm-6am, magnacarta.ticketabc.com

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Easter 2014: weekend parties and clubs in London

Will Ferrell Is Making an EDM Romantic Comedy

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Will Ferrell has occasionally played characters who might conceivably fit in on the electronic dance music scene "Smiling's my favorite," anyone? and now he's developing a movie based around the subject. Ferrell is among the producers onI'm in Love With the DJ, a romantic comedy just picked up by Sony Pictures, according to Deadline. He and Funny or Die partner Adam McKay will produce the film with fellow Gary Sanchez Productions exec Kevin Messick.

The script by Lauryn Kahn, who has worked with McKay and directed various FoD shorts, follows a young woman who heads to Spain with two close friends for work. This "quickly turns into a crazy hunt for a hot DJ through the" EDM scene, per the report. (If you're looking to gauge the level of "crazy," it's going to be R-rated. This is, we can only assume, Ibiza after all.)

Like Las Vegas, Hollywood has been gambling on EDM as of late. Disney hired Avicii and Kaskade to drop the bass on classic movie songs. Diplo's working on an 8 Mile-style electronic music movie. And even Will Smith and Jay Z have their hands on an dance comedy series for HBO. But with Ferrell involved, one hopesI'm in Love With the DJ will stay classy.

Kahn previously sold a screenplay for an in-the-works film now titledThe Social Life for a reported $1 million to $1.5 million, so if any movie moneymen are reading this, we have a spec script calledLast Night a DJ Saved My Life we're totally going to write tonight.

Check out SPIN featureWe Major: How the Record Business Finally Learned to Sell EDM.

Let the Will Ferrell-Chad Smith Drum Battle Begin!

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Will Ferrell Is Making an EDM Romantic Comedy

children-rave-london-afp-180414.jpg

April 18, 2014

Children enjoy the music and entertainment at the Big Fish Little Fish 2-4 Hour Party People event in Brixton, South London. The event allows children to experience a child-friendly nightclub experience with live DJ sets, chill-out areas and club-style lighting. AFP pic, April 18, 2014.The bass is pumping, the lights are low and the dance floor of the club is heaving. It's the weekend and the young man is enjoying himself until someone steals his balloon.

Dressed in a Spiderman outfit, the four-year-old boy runs to his dad by the bar to complain, before receiving a glow-stick as consolation.

Such are the highs and lows of family raving, a new craze fuelled by London's ex-clubbers who still want to go dancing but now have kids in tow.

"What a genius idea beer, raving, children. What more could you want?" said Paul Crawley, 34, swaying slowly on the dance floor carrying his baby daughter Camille in a sling.

"The worst thing is I was invited out last night, but I said no, I've got to stay sober for this party."

This dingy bar in south London is normally the venue for all-night raves, but for two and a half hours on a Saturday afternoon, it is transformed into a playgroup with a difference.

In the chill out area, mums breastfeed on low leather sofas to a soundtrack of soft rock, while older children paint and draw at a well-equipped craft table under moving projected images.

The bar is well stocked and next door, professional DJs play chilled house music, funk and drum'n'bass at a surprisingly loud volume, although organisers insist it is safe for babies' ears.

The undisputed king of the dance floor is Caelan, a fleet-footed five-year-old wearing impeccable white trainers.

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children-rave-london-afp-180414.jpg

Nightlife Agenda: DC Braus anniversary, August Alsina and champion DJs

Every Tuesday, the Going Out Guide staff highlights the week's best DJs, bands, dance nights and parties.

DC Brau celebrates its third anniversary this week with a special happy hour at Meridian Pint and a concert at its Northeast D.C. brewery. (Photo by Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)

Tuesday, April 15 It seems hard to believe, but three years ago, Washington didn't have a single production brewery. Then DC Brau arrived, quickly becoming ubiquitous at bars all over town. Though the brewery is best known for its hoppy Citizen and Corruption ales, dozens of beers have come out of the Bladensburg Road brewery, from light golden ales to rich Belgian ales aged in whiskey barrels. The full range of Brau will be available Tuesday night at Meridian Pint, the Columbia Heights beer bar where DC Brau was unveiled back in 2011. "Core" beers - Public, Citizen and Corruption - will be $3 all night for the third anniversary, but the real attraction will be a range of rare and vintage beers on tap, including Natas, a Belgian-style imperial stout made with Baltimore's Stillwater Ales; a version of the strong Heurich's Lager aged in barrels that have held maple syrup and rye whiskey; and Brainless Corruption, an extra-hoppy Belgian IPA made in collaboration with Utah's Epic Brewing Company. Doors open at 5 p.m., and some beers will be in very limited quantities.

Over the course of seven albums, the Black Lips have remained a remarkably consistent (and great) garage rock band. They've lost a bit of the hazy '60s fuzzy over the years -- on their new record, they occasionally channel the circa-1970s Rolling Stones instead of the "Nuggets" box set -- but still deliver perfectly ramshackle rock and roll. They visit the Black Cat with Natural Child.

Wednesday, April 16 Even longtime D.C. residents frequently overlook the city's Emancipation Day celebrations, which mark the day in 1862 when President Abraham Lincoln signed the Compensation Emancipation Act, which freed all slaves in Washington. (Nine months later, Lincoln signed the more well-known Emancipation Proclamation.) Whatever your knowledge of the holiday's history, it's hard to ignore the city's free Emancipation Day Concert at Freedom Plaza, which is stocked with talent: Hip-hop pioneer Doug E. Fresh, conscious rapper Talib Kweli, party-rocking DJ Kool of "Let Me Clear My Throat" fame, rapper and poet J. Ivy, and go-go/funk/R&B ensemble Black Alley. Vendors will be on hand to provide food and drink.

Singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright is an artist who always follows his muse, whether that's recording clever, romantic cabaret tunes, recreating Judy Garland's legendary 1961 Carnegie Hall concert or, as on his latest album, working with superproducer Mark Ronson to create a collection of poppy 21st-century Yacht Rock songs. With so much great material, every Wainwright concert is basically a "Best of" album, so the audience at the Lincoln Theatre is in for a treat.

The future of the Corcoran Gallery of Art may still be shrouded in mystery, but its popular events and happy hours continue as usual. This month's Corcoran Uncorked is all about the future: "Best & Brightest" features performance art by three Corcoran students being featured in the current "NEXT 2014" exhibit, which collects the work of 148 students graduating from the College of Art and Design; live music from up-and-coming synthpop group Pleasure Curses and '80s-style pop group Furniteur (which features members of Brett); and samples of new cocktails at the Muse cafe. Tickets also include tours of three current Corcoran exhibits.

Thursday, April 17 New Orleans singer August Alsina is making a fairly serious bid for the mantle of "Sensitive R&B Thug" with his debut album "Testimony." Alsina has become famous for radio hits featuring Trinidad James and Jeezy, but "Testimony" mostly eschews party anthems for tender piano-led tracks or mid-tempo ballads warning about life on the streets. Even "Benediction," an uplifting track featuring a verse from Rick Ross, finds Alsina confessing "So many nights I tried / to hide how I felt, I would cry inside / And I ran through the streets till my feet got tired / 'Cause I ain't wanna have my shoes on them power lines.") Alsina marks this week's release of "Testimony" with a special appearance at the Park at 14th, where he'll perform live and host the party alongside DJ Quicksilva, beginning at 6 p.m.

The revival of the Howard Theatre and the ongoing uncertainty surrounding the future of the Lincoln Theatre may have pushed the latter off the radar for concertgoers. Stephen Marley is a great reason to check out that space out again. Marley manages to distinguish himself among a large group of accomplished Marley progeny, whether it's his contributions to his brother Damien "Jr. Gong"'s Grammy-winning projects or his own equally celebrated solo releases. As one of the elder siblings of the Marley clan, Stephen's music is more at the roots end of the reggae spectrum, which is a great fit for the Lincoln Theatre's historic role on Washington's Black Broadway.

We're only a month or so away from beach season. If you're not already thinking about Memorial Day, you may be after Thursday night. Mason Inn is hosting a night with Burnt Sienna, the Philadelphia rock band known for performing covers at Dewey Beach's Lighthouse and Rusty Rudder and Ocean City's Seacrets, among other venues. The group takes the stage at 9 p.m. and there's no cover charge.

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Nightlife Agenda: DC Braus anniversary, August Alsina and champion DJs