Each year, roughly 20,000 neon-garbed attendants make the pilgrimage to the Electric Daisy Carnival, a 3-day electro-danc e
music festival. This year, despite introducing a new venue in New
Jersey, the crowd was met with the same hype and numbers, and not a
single drugged-out, garlanded teenager short.
Like a sea of electronic sounds where every song vibrationall y
ripples to the next, the EDC atmosphere behaves like one giant frat
party. This year’s headliners—Aviicii, Bassnectar, Calvin Harris, and
Fatboy Slim (to name a few)—raised the ruckus, as a body of fluorescent
fans passionately pumped their fists into the night.
While EDC caters to a certain ear and demographic, each year it manages to expand its reach to sounds that fringe outside of its electro-club by dance genre. With Chuckie’s remixed ode to “N*ggas
In Paris” or Bassnectar’s Lil Jon soundbytes, hip hop quietly weaved its
way into this year’s music carnival. But Bassnectar, a freeform
electronic DJ who surfaced onto the hip hop scene with his recent
collaboratio ns with Lupe Fiasco, believes the intersection of these two genres is nothing new.
“I think hip hop was experimentin g with dubstep before dubstep was in existence, and that was with heavy, slow, chopped-and- screwed
beats, it was basically a perfect marriage,” says Bassnectar. “And I’ve
been doing that since 2006, making hip hop/dubstep remixes. I think
it’s the larger music society only now starting to pay attention and
being a little slow to the game. It’s kind of old news now.”
Last night, Bassnectar stepped onto the headliners stage to play his “electronic bass remix” medley to prove just how flexible electronic and hip hop are together. Threading a dope Fugees mix into a Pharcyde track, Bassnectar’s “I Got 5 On It” record almost became a new sound independent of its samples—something the DJ himself calls “synergistic .”
And that crossover between the two subcultural genres helped to fuel a weekend of Electronic Daisy’s psychedelic frenzy.
Credit : Vibe Magazine Online
Like a sea of electronic sounds where every song vibrationall
While EDC caters to a certain ear and demographic, each year it manages to expand its reach to sounds that fringe outside of its electro-club
“I think hip hop was experimentin
Last night, Bassnectar stepped onto the headliners stage to play his “electronic bass remix” medley to prove just how flexible electronic and hip hop are together. Threading a dope Fugees mix into a Pharcyde track, Bassnectar’s “I Got 5 On It” record almost became a new sound independent of its samples—something the DJ himself calls “synergistic
And that crossover between the two subcultural genres helped to fuel a weekend of Electronic Daisy’s psychedelic frenzy.
Credit : Vibe Magazine Online
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