Apr 29: Rusko @ Edmonton Event Centre

The bad boy of Dubstep is coming to Edmonton this Sunday. This is gonna be a great party if Rusko brings his A game. If I can make the comparison here, for all you old schoolers, Rusko is like the Carl Cox of Dubstep.

- Das Capital

Edmonton Bangers

Sunday April.29th All Blown Up is proud to present…


The long awaited, highly anticipated return of the undisputed king of dubstep…


==========================
:: RUSKO :: ( Mad Decent | Dub Police UK )
==========================
http://www.ruskoonfire.com/
http://soundcloud.com/rusko-3 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=qcGLppGzu0g


with support from Drum & Bass superstars!


==============================
:: SIGMA :: ( Breakbeat Kaos UK )
==============================
http://soundcloud.com/sigmahq


==============================
:: Knight Riderz :: ( Seclusasis | Muti Music CAN )
==============================
http://www.knightriderz.com/
http://soundcloud.com/knight-riderz

with support from …


Ten -O (Step’d Up)

Spenny B (Step’d Up)

MNG (Step’d Up)

FULL PK SOUND RIG!!!!
http://pksound.ca/

===================================
|| ADVANCE TICKETS - ON SALE Saturday Feb.4th ||
===================================

ONLY -»> $30

Why Are March and April So Slow For Electronic Music Events?

ultra

Ultra Fest 2011 Line Up

As a Miami native, I can say that I know first-hand what happens to our music scene every March and April - the World Music Conference (WMC). Basically, every year the entire electronic music industry, from promoters to producers, descend on Miami for the annual WMC. The conference decides who and what is important to our respective scenes. It’s a great place for industry money makers to pat each other on the back, and decide who will, or won’t be allowed in the “club.”

If you live in Miami, or anywhere nearby, as I have from 1999-2008, it’s a month of massive parties. Still, it’s not the reason for the conference, it’s the by-product. As I mentioned before, WMC is for industry insiders. For a “light” registration fee of $400, you are allowed access to promotional workshops, topical meetings and initial releases of music and various products. Think of it as conference for any type of industry - just cooler and more exclusive.

wmc1

WMC DJ Workshop

wmc2

WMC Panel

In between the meetings and events of the World Music Conference, lots of promotional events are put on day or night. The events are basically parties to you and me. The people throwing them can be manufacturers (like Stanton, Pioneer, Vestax, Apple, Native, etc), labels, DJ syndicates or promoters. A lot of the time they combine forces and throw bigger parties, like my personal favorite, The Future Sound of Breaks annual (Miami is home to breakbeats, from funky to electro).

fsob 2010

Future Sound of Breaks 2010 Line Up (My Personal Favorite WMC Party)

fsob 2

Future Sound of Breaks 2011 Line Up (My Personal Favorite WMC Party)

The major party of the Conference is Ultra Fest. I can easily say it’s the world’s biggest party - year after year. When it first began as a beach party in 1999, Ultra was a daylong event with regional talent Baby Anne and Rabbit in the Moon. In 2000, Ultra was headlined by Sasha and Digweed. As Ultra evolved the headliners grew in number, and so did the massive scale of the party. Now the Ultra party is three days, in a huge state park, with several stages. Almost every DJ and producer that you know, and so many others we don’t, are on the bill. The cost to attend is retarded, just a little below $100 a day. If you attend the WMC, as a registrant, or your considered an insider, it’s free.

ultra crowd

Ultra Fest Main Stage


Ultra Fest Crowd

I used to love the WMC months when I lived in Miami - but not past 2003. Now it’s where all richest people from all over the world come to party, because they can afford it. Most of the attendees and party revelers that attend WMC parties (and Ultra), don’t have a real understanding for the music. Lots of attendees nowadays are Euro trash, or rich South Americans that have made events overcrowded and too expensive to attend. I feel poor next to them because I can’t even afford to buy water anymore. In 2008, a bottle of water at Ultra was $10, and you had to wait in line for over an hour to get it. If you can afford the Ultra VIP package you get waited on, with no lines, and special areas away crowded masses - upfront.

Nothing like our hardworking Edmontonians


“…um…can you like tell me who the DJ playing is??…He to-tally rocks”


Sometimes I’m glad I traded Miami for Edmonton

So to get back to my point. Parties, concerts, massives, etc, die-off worldwide each year because they all converge on one place - Miami. WMC began in earnest, but now it’s becoming more of a spectacle for insiders and rich tourists, rather than a place for real heads to meet, talk and share. And that’s a same.

-Das Capital

Edmonton Bangers

Jan 15 LA Riots @ The Pawn Shop

LA RIOTS are gonna bring it to Edmonton….so look out!

http://www.myspace.com/lariotsofficial


SATURDAY JANUARY 15

at

PAWNSHOP
10551 - 82Ave

(On Sale Dec 22) Tickets Available at:: FOOSH (whyte Ave) , http://yeglive.ca/

So if you still dig that  indie-tronic sound, this may be the party of the week. It’s a hard call though, with Designer Drugs at the Starlite Room on Friday. Designer Drugs is much more of a driving, bassline driven show. LA Riots, on the other hand, will be funkier and probably easier to dance to (albeit less intense).

-Das Capital

Jan 14 Easy Love Presents: Designer Drugs and Jokers of the Scene @ Starlite Room

Easy Love

Easy Love presents Designer Drugs, Jokers of The Scene, Jesse Jamz and guests

18+ in the Starlite Room on Jan 14, 2011 at 9:00 pm

Ticket info
$19 early bird tickets at Foosh, then $29 @ Foosh and Blackbyrd and second batch $35 @ Foosh and Blackbyrd



Well once again….Designer Drugs are back in Edmonton. It might be worth checking out if you’ve never seen them, or if you really dug their last show.

Edmonton Bangers is Back….Real Heads This is for Y’all

My iMac was totally messed up….

…..After checking every peripheral (from two hard drives, an A/D interface, etc) and all the apps I was using (Logic, Firefox, Time Machine, etc)…nothing solved the issue.

…..Finally it was on a Logic forum that I found that my SeaGate hard drive and it’s Memeo back-up agent app was causing the problem.

Word to the wise: If you have a Mac….never…EVER…get a SeaGate hard drive.

Dubstep In Edmonton: A Chance to Diversify by Helping the Underdog

ds

I’ve noticed that there seem to be a really disconnect in what scenesters are listening to in Edmonton. We have what seem to be 3 separate crowds. You only need to look at the party postings to confirm this:

1. Trance Scenesters: Listening to everything from Armin Van Buuren, Tiesto, Marco V., Paul Van Dyk, etc.

I have no particular problems with trance, but I still can’t figure out why it hasn’t died yet. Most of N. America has kicked it to the curb. In the period of 2001-2003 trance was becoming known as candy-raver garbage. Lots of old school ravers wouldn’t touch it with a ten foot pole. I remember a lot of heads were wearing the “FU@K TRANCE” T-shirts. We all just watched it tank.

From Miami to Seattle, trance pops its beat-less head out in cities where Europeans often visit and in large festivals. In Edmonton though, it’s huge.

I may not like it, personally, but I think it thrives here for some purpose. A lot of old school heads will agree with me when I say DIVERSIFY your taste in beats – try something new.

2. Electro House Scenesters and Indie-Electro Hipsters: Listening to everything from David Guetta, Deadmau5, Boys Noize, Justice, MSTRKFT, Crookers, Vandalism, Fake Blood, etc.

I have a particular fondness for this music – I still love it. When I was spinning the Miami/Ft. Lauderdale Crush parties this was everything to us. We were more of the Indie-Electro Hipster type. The crowd here screamed of irony, wearing Bill Cosby sweaters and Reebok Pumps. It was cool – sometimes to cool to be cool.

The term Banger Music was made up to label the genre, but as you can imagine, it’s hard to pin down artists from MIA to Kid Cudi to Deadmau5 in a single phrase. In N. America this sound is beginning to diminish. At one point it was very cool to be a hipster…now….not so much.

In Edmonton this scene is doing very well. It tends to lean a little toward the House side of fence, but it still leaves room for the hipster type.

A lot of old school heads will agree with me when I say DIVERSIFY your taste in beats – try something new. All I can say is DUBSTEP!

3.  Dubstep: Listening to the sounds of Rusko, Skream, Proper Tings, Emalkay, Eksmo, Nero, etc.

Dubstep: the story so far

Back in the early 2000s, dubstep was being made by just a handful of producers based in a couple of micro-centers: Sheffield, Leicester and the concrete-coated suburbs of south-west London. They used free PC software like Fruity Loops or PlayStation’s music-making software Music 2000 (the same stuff So Solid Crew used to record their first album - the story goes that they took the memory card in to be mastered) and made their own wonky versions of dark garage records by producers like EI-B, Benny III and Wookie.

 
In January 2006 everything changed - or more accurately, everything began to change. On 10* January one-time NME journalist Mary Anne Hobbs invited a group of producers onto her 2am midweek show for a dubstep special. Mala, Skream, Kode9 and Space Ape, Vex’d, Hatcha, Loefah and Sgt Pokes and Distance all played micro-sets their own tunes (apart from Hatcha, a rare DJ-not-producer, who played Benga, Coki, Skream and Digital Mystikz). The show remains the most downloaded of Hobbs’ shows, and was spread worldwide by barefiles.com, a site run by teenage south Londoner ‘Deapoh’. The rest is increasingly well-documented history - Croydon’s entry on Wikipedia even includes a short history of dubstep under the ‘culture’ section. Since 2006 hundreds of clubs, labels and fansites have been started, boosted by the DIY ethic that runs deep in the genetics of the scene. People who started as fans have become DJs, producers, photographers, bloggers, T-shirt designers, promoters and compilers, documenting and adding to the world of dubstep simply because they want to.


New York DJ Joe Nice’s one-time assertion that dubstep is defined by “bass, space and place” doesn’t even cover it any more: in 2008 it is more about an association with the clubs, radio stations or labels surrounding the music than any specifics of genre or sound.

This scene is huge in N. America and much of the rest of the English speaking world. It’s taken over in a way that most didn’t believe was possible. It was lightning fast. The World Music Conference (WMC), held every year in Miami, saw this Dubstep surge first hand. From the reports given to me, most of the parties, before and after the main event Ultrafest were Dubstep parties.

In Edmonton you will find Dubstep growing at fast pace, but it’s hindered by the other 2 music styles of our scene. I insist you give it a try. Dubsteo parties, as of late, have be held at the Starlite Room. I will also continue to update you on new events.

BELOW THIS POST you will find several Dubstep tracks I’ve posted today. They are what I consider to be the highlights of 2009-Present (downloads not available at the moment). Give them a listen.

Mar 6: 12th Planet @ The Temple

12th plante

Oh Snap, Party Alarma and Renegade Bass present Battle of the Bassline with 12th Planet and Esmko


12th Planet
John started over from scratch. After seven years touring the world as Drum n Bass maestro Infiltrata, after winning over icons such as Goldie, Photek, and DJ Craze, John Dadzie gave himself a new name, a new sound, and a new determination.

It was 2005 and the gentile beatmaker was inspired by sounds he heard spun by the likes Technical Itch, Skream and Benga. It was dubstep. And it was his calling.

Once 12th Planet is born, the story really begins. The British dubstep movement takes hold in LA thanks to 12th Planet and the events he aligns himself with; Smog, Media Contender, HARD, and his own club night Dubtroit.

Like the mythological twelfth planet (popularized by controversial author Zecharia Sitchin), our 12th Planet flies perpendicular to the system. His wicked beats are off axis. His subsonic frequencies surround you in their own orbit. America’s first king of dubstep is ready for impact.

12th planet comes from the Summerian / Akkadian archeologist and Semite linguist Zacharia Sitchin. He was the first person to decode Mesopotamian hieroglyphics. This includes Babylon, Akkad, Sumeria, and Assyria. Anyone who knows history can tell you that the first “civilization” in the world was the ancient Mesopotamians. The term 12th planet refers to a planet that orbits our solar system on a bi-eliptical orbit, and comes around once every 4500 years. A very long time ago according to sitchin. The 12th planet “Nibiru” crashed into Marduk and created earth. - Tom Nitrous (read less)

18+ in the Temple on Mar 06, 2010 at 9:00 pm

Show info
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=308371907549

Ticket info
$15 @ door

2010 is going to be the Year Of DubStep…it’s unstoppable.

Jan 30: DJ CRAZE @ The StarLite Room!!

Craze

Straight from Miami…3 time DMC world champion….

I can’t even believe it. And I almost missed this one….

DJ Craze (Miami) @ The StarLite Room TONIGHT!!

DJ CRAZE

http://www.myspace.com/crazearoni

On top of his untouchable turntablist skills and scratch champion showmanship, the world has also recognised that Craze is a second to none club DJ – he has toured the globe over, from Jamaica to Australia to Japan to Iceland to France to the country he was born, Nicaragua.

All DJing aside, Craze is also a world- renowned producer, releasing wildly successful drum’n’bass records with labels such as Cartel Recordings, Breakbeat Kaos,C.I.A., and other hip hop inspired productions with the likes of DMC Records, Ninja Tune Records, OM Records and K7 Records. It’s the respect from both DJs and audiences alike that has paved Craze’s seamless move between hip hop and turntablism to drum’n’bass – both serious subzero clique/cult scenes the globe over demanding much of any artist trying to peddle their wares worldwide; to what now sounds like club-style Miami bass, formed with the technical love of hip hop with clean cuts and ridiculously dextrous scratching, but a mix up of straight up rap, ghettotech, raw booty house, old-school electro, Baltimore/Miami bass crossover and sweaty lo-end dancefloor music, making it all but impossible to keep still.

Craze is currently on the road with Kanye West for the Glow In The Dark Tour featuring N.E.R.D, Lupe Fiasco and Rhianna. This is Craze – the man who arguably defined his hometown Miami turntablism scene, only to return now to reinvent this take on the Miami sound; a neo-genre of his own special blend of every which way club codes from the ghosts of discos past, present and future.

Coming from Toronto, to Miami, to NYC, and now to Edmonton’s Party Scene - My New Home

First of all I want to make sure that everyone knows that Edmonton Bangers is not run by any promoters. It’s just me, Das Capital of Opium For The Masses.

I’m originally from Toronto, but I’ve spent the past year in NYC, and the nine years before that in Miami. I really like it here in Edmonton - truly. I came here because a lot of my high school friends from Toronto moved to Edmonton for better career opportunities. Edmonton did fulfill that promise for me. I also really love the people here; it totally makes up for this frigid weather.

Aside from my career as a Research Analyst, I’ve worked as a Party Promoter in Toronto. In Miami I moved on to DJing Crush Parties (an early weekly hipster party…and since, the longest running music event in Florida). Since 2005, I’ve also been producing and remixing tracks with Opium For The Masses.

Edmonton Bangers is my contribution to the scene in Edmonton. I will list only the most promising of parties in the Edmonton area. I will also throw in some tracks (to stream and/or download), and post party pictures, and reviews, whenever I can attend an event.

I tend to lean in the direction of the most up-to-date electronic music. At this moment it’s the worldwide movement of Banger/Indie/Indie-Tronic/Electro (i.e. Ed Banger, LA Riots, Boys Noize, Justice, Diplo, Kid Cudi, New Young Pony Club, Tegan and Sara, Villains, Calvin Harris, etc, etc) that I gravitate to. But I still love all genres of electronic, from Drum and Bass to Progressive House (as long as it’s good - not cheesy or cliche).

I WILL NOT SELL-OUT! I’m here for the healthy well being of Edmonton’s party scene. So I will not work promoting or DJing in Edmonton to remain un-biased.

-DAS CAPITAL

MTV’s 2009 Love Fest Featuring DROP THE LIME (Brooklyn, USA) @ The Pawn Shop

So this was my first party since moving to Edmonton. I spent the past ten years in the U.S.; the first 9 years in Miami and the 10th in NYC. As a regular promoter and DJ/producer, I wanted to see what Edmonton had to offer….because it looks like I’m gonna to be here for a while.

My friend and I entered the Pawn Shop at about midnight. The staff at the Pawn Shop are the nicest people I’ve ever encountered in the party environment - from the bouncers, to their really sweet coat check-in girl. The people working the Pawn Shop were great. Thank you Al, you run a great venue.

Drop the Lime, dropped a great DJ set. Nice mixing, beat-juggling, and he would even get on the mic to sing along with a song. The crowd was loving it! He started out with truly bassline heavy banger music, then he would switch to half tempo breaks, to give the crowd a rest from dancing at full-speed. He dropped track-after-track of extremely bassline heavy music. I found it anti-climatic at times, but he is by no means, a lazy-DJ.

Love Fest was the same day as the huge (trance mostly) party Frost @ The Edmonton Event Center. Regardless, I was really expecting the Pawn Shop to reach capacity, but instead it was a nice 3/4 full. I could see that all the True Heads in Edmonton went to see Drop the Lime at Love Fest. No candy ravers. No E-tards (as my friend Dr. Trance used to say back in 2000). No one annoying. Just true Bangers.

If both Frost and Love Fest were in NYC, you would find Drop the Lime in the bigger venue with a denser crowd. Armin Van Buuren, just like Tiesto, are DJs on the decline. They are still making hollow 4 to-the-floor beats, packed with melodies, but lacking decent basslines, good beats, and any originality.

I’m not going to use the term hipster, because every hipster in NYC or Miami is too hip to be a hipster, but ironically we’re just that. It’s getting to be overkill - especially in Brooklyn. But in Edmonton, I can see the transition from run-of-the-mill trance and house parties, to the newer music of indie-tronic and banger music (yes…hipster music, but we don’t dare say that).

True Heads of the party (or previous rave) scene in Miami and NYC, have already adjusted to this wide range of music. Everything from: Calvin Harris, Crookers, MSTRKFT, Chromeo, Shiny Toy Guns, Ladytron, Metric, The Sounds, Boys Noize, Girl Talk, Justice, MIA, Diplo, MGMT, The Klaxons, New Young Pony Club, Tegan and Sara, CSS, Treasure Fingers, Cool Kids, Ayres and Tittsworth, etc, etc, etc,

….It’s a wide range of music that’s indie, retro, hip-hop, b-more, and freestyle based. Then let’s not forget all the remixes and mash-ups of original, and retro songs, that remixers cook-up.

This is what the party scene is in larger cities from Toronto to L.A.. The only people that still dig that trance scene (outside of smaller cities- like Edmonton) are Euro-trash and those really rich pricks who like to call themselves VIPs; you’ll find them dancing with champagne glasses, wearing nothing but high cuture.

My friend and I walked away from Love Fest @ The Pawn Shop with big grins on our faces. We had a good time, through a snow storm and all the cold.

Big thank you to Al for arranging our visit.

-DAS CAPITAL

Edmonton Bangers.

What Party To Attend On Sunday Night??

If you’re a die hard trance fan, or just really love Armin Van Buuren go with Frost. If you’re new to parties, let me put it in these terms: If you prefer melodies over bass-lines, softer, sultry, more radio friendly…go Frost.

If you’re more hard-edged and into the newest of the new (dare I say hipsters?). This is a true banger music party, go Love Fest.

This is going to be my first party since leaving Brooklyn….I’m going to Love Fest, featuring one of Brooklyn’s best, Drop The Lime.

-Das Capital

October 15th: Dragonette @ The Starlite Room

dragonette starlite

This one should really be great. Dragonette! Wow!

The Union presents Dragonette with Ruby Jean and the Thoughtful Bees

Ticket info
Tickets on sale @ Ticketmaster.ca and Blackbyrd