A Viral 'Outbreak' is Coming to Your City! Disco Donnie Presents Joins Zomboy This Summer
There is a looming outbreak that will infect unsuspecting cities all across the United States this summer – and you won’t even want a vaccine.
Born half zombie and half boy, bass music favorite Zomboy just announced a massive set of dates for The Outbreak Tour in late Spring and well into Summer. Friends Cookie Monsta, Eptic, and TL will be tagging along for many of the 28 dates making for an epic night of wub and filth. The tour starts in Raleigh, NC on May 22nd at Lincoln Theater and weaves its way across every corner of the country before ending in San Diego, CA and Boulder, CO in July.
With a thorough background in traditional sound engineering, Zomboy’s well-crafted productions have undoubtedly helped garner quite the following in the short span of his career. His debut Game Time EP was in the top 5 of Beatport’s dubstep chart for over eight weeks, within six months of the release, tracks were licensed to eight music compilations on various labels like Warner Music and Ministry of Sound – not bad for a debut, huh?
Though he’s best known for his grime-flavored dubstep, the undead producer incorporates drumstep, electro, and orchestral pieces to create his unique and ever-so-loved sound. Putting the finishing touches on his album named The Outbreak, due out in July 2014, be a part of the viral outbreak and join us on our partnering dates:
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta in Raleigh, NC on Thursday, May 22nd
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, TC in Charlotte, NC on Saturday, May 31st
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, TC in Nashville, TN on Saturday, June 7th
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, Eptic in Austin, TX on Thursday, July 10th
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, Eptic in Houston, TX on Friday, July 11th
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, Eptic in Dallas, TX on Saturday, July 12th
- Zomboy, Cookie Monsta, Eptic in Albuquerque, NM on Friday, July 18th
- Zomboy in Tampa, FL on Friday, August 1st
The #SMFTampa 2014 Journey - Chapter 3: The Music
This coming Memorial Day weekend will be one for the books as Disco Donnie Presents, Sunset Events, and Committee Entertainment bring Tampa’s Sunset Music Festival back to Raymond James Stadium (North Lot) for two days on Saturday, May 24th and Sunday May 25th.
We’ve been powering through the past few weeks with a series of videos inspired by the anticipated event. For last week’s episode of #SMFTampa 2014 Journey, we reminisced on the atmosphere that permeates a festival. This week, it’s all about “The Music.”
There is no denying the power music has on the human soul. Music can cleanse the mind, mend a broken heart, and speak without ever having to say a word. Music is what brings us together. Music is what brings us to life.
In the Beginning There was House: Disco Donnie Presents Remembers Frankie Knuckles
It’s hard to express the magnitude of Frankie Knuckles’ contributions to music and its ever-changing evolution. Widely known as the “Godfather of House Music,” Frankie didn’t just create a genre; he placed the building blocks to birth an entire culture.
Early Career and the Death of Disco
Born Francis Nicholls in the Bronx, Frankie began learning the art of DJing from close childhood friend Larry Levan when he was a student at the Fashion Institute of Technology, “We would spend entire afternoons working up ideas on how to present a record so that people would hear it in a new way and fall in love with it,” Knuckles remembered in a later interview, “To us it was an art form.” Though initially he couldn’t even mix two records together, he was very much drawn to the concept and stuck with it. Often filling in for Larry at The Continental Baths, a venue that launched the careers of Bette Middler and her pianist Barry Manilow, Frankie took the mixing technique he learned in New York and brought it to Chicago, where he moved in the late 1970s.
Known for his previous gig playing RnB and disco in NYC, Frankie was the perfect choice for Chicago’s Warehouse nightclub who aimed to capitalize on the growing disco movement. Opening its doors in 1977, Frankie played at Warehouse regularly and even scored his own night and residency. But when the movie Saturday Night Fever was released later that same year, disco reached an alarming new level of popularity and subsequently turned the once underground disco, into more of a cheesy, commercial fad. Many who had championed the genre for years were quick to abandon it. Seemingly happening overnight, the desire people had for disco was in a spiraling decline.
The Birth of House
In hopes of saving disco’s downward spiral, Frankie went back to the drawing board to rethink the popularized sound. Manipulating magnetic tape reels, Frankie was able to extend the instrumental interludes on R&B and disco songs. With a rhythm box, precursor to the drum machine, Frankie added drum loops to back the instrumentals during his live mixing, “I would program different break beats and use them as segues between songs and additional beats,” he recalled in an interview in 2011, “I had my own little piece of heaven right there.”
With a stripped back and minimal approach, Frankie’s newly found sound and style brought a lot of attention to Warehouse, “At the time I was the only DJ in the city playing a sound that they hadn’t heard anywhere else.” Unsure of what to call the new sound, patrons of the club started referring to it as “House Music,” shortened from Warehouse, as it was the only place in Chicago where you could hear it. The club gained a cult following, attracting people from all over who were curious to see what house music was all about, including Detroit’s techno pioneer Derrick May, (and one-third of the Belleville Three) who would later gave Frankie his very first synthesizer.
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery and Frankie Knuckles, moreover house, was no exception, “…When dance parties and regional DJs began popping up on the South Side of the city, to attract the same kind of audience that I had at Warehouse, they would advertise that they played ‘House Music.'”
Frankie performed at Warehouse until 1982 when he opened his own house music venue called the Power Plant. Here, he showcased several tracks recorded on reel-to-reel tapes by local artist Jamie Principle and helped secure commercial releases for several of those tracks like “Baby Wants to Ride” and “Your Love,” which are universally recognized as some of the earliest house classics.
A Lasting Legacy
After Power Plant closed in 1987, Frankie took his style to the UK, performing at one of the first London clubs to welcome the new sound, the legendary Delirium. Chicago house and Detroit techno was beginning to revolutionize England’s nightlife. Around the same time, with the emergence of acid house, Europeans unearthed an associated drug lifestyle with the genre and created a unique sociomusicology within the community, thus spawning the onset of rave culture.
DJ, producer, and Grammy award winner, Frankie Knuckles went on to sign with Virgin Records and has either produced, or remixed for Michael Jackson, Mary J Blige, Janet Jackson, Pet Shop Boys, Diana Ross, Luther Vandross, and Toni Braxton. But even after all of the success, Frankie would always greet you with a big smile. Friends say, his “infectiously warm demeanor spread to everyone he met or was listening to his music.”
Today, with dance music’s popularity at an all-time high, the sudden passing of Frankie Knuckles has left a profound impact on music fans around the globe. Simply put, if it weren’t for his innovations, the plight of brands like Disco Donnie Presents, and those that attend our shows, would’ve ceased to exist.
Thank you Frankie Knuckles. You not only pioneered a sound, but you helped bring many generations to life.
Your Initial Lineup for The Hudson Project 2014
There are no shortage of Stateside music festivals as of late and it’s rare that a new concept gets to stand out among the pool. But The Hudson Project stands to become one the quintessential events for the United States.
Making its debut at Winston Farm in Saugerties, New York on July 11-13th, this music and arts festival is unlike any other. Produced by our friends of SFX Entertainment and MCP Presents along with assistance from Michael Lang, one of the founders of the original Woodstock festival, who represents the landowner in this new venture.
Immerse yourself in the epic three-day experience when you watch many local musical acts and performance artists/troupes. The event will also host an art village showcasing interactive art exhibitions, regional arts and crafts and a selection of Hudson Valley-area gourmet food, wine, craft beer and specialty cocktails.
Earlier in March, we teased some of the artists who would grace our inaugural lineup by telling you our headliners were Kendrick Lamar, Bassnectar, Modest Mouse, and The Flaming Lips. Well today, we’re excited to finally reveal the rest of the initial lineup (with more acts to be announced).
Spanning nearly every musical genre and subgenre, any (and every) music fan will have their interests piqued by the lineup of this festival. Okay, enough of the waiting – here are your first batch of artists for The Hudson Project.
Tickets are now on sale, buy your tickets today!
Initial Lineup
- Kendrick Lamar
- Bassnectar
- Modest Mouse
- Flaming Lips
- STS9
- Moby (DJ set)
- Big Gigantic
- Excision
- Atmosphere
- Matt & Kim
- Flying Lotus
- Capital Cities
- Rebelution
- Bonobo (live)
- The New Deal
- Dr. Dog
- Infected Mushroom (live)
- Holy Ghost
- GRiZ
- Lettuce
- Paper Diamond
- Tipper
- Savoy
- Twin Shadow
- Nightmares on Wax (live)
- Cults
- Emancipator
- Bro Safari
- ZZ Ward
- Conspirator
- araabMUZIK
- Gold Panda
- Flatbush Zombie
- !!!
- Kill Paris
- Robert Delong
- Isaiah Rashad
- The Soul Rebels
- Keys N Krates
- Kap Slap
- Yacht
- Jon Hopkins
- Luminox
- Oliver
- Tokimonsta
- Kygo
- Lunice
- Kelela
- Odesza
- Kastle
- Project 46
- Majical Cloudz
- SZA
- Bad Rabbits
- Thomas Jack
- Small Black
- The Floozies
- The Range
- Marco Benevento Trio
- Moon Hooch
- Chrome Sparks
- Audrey Napoleon
- Twiddle
- Lindsay Lowend
- Tauk
Celebrating 20 Years of Disco Donnie Presents: Psychedelic Pimp Daddy Land
For the 20 years that Disco Donnie Presents has been in the business of making people dance, the themes for our parties have always been a buzzworthy topic.
When raves were in full-force towards the mid to late 90s, promoters were constantly attempting to outdo one another. And if you ever read a full list of titles given to each party, you’d see why, “It seemed like you always had to name your party something super silly,” Donnie remembers, “people had Candyland, ‘Supa’ this, and ‘Phat’ that – it was just the same thing over and over again.” We all know Donnie was never one to conform, so he started brainstorming, “I wanted to do something that was kinda like Candyland but funnier. So basically, the goal was to try to string together as many nonsense words together to make an awesome party name.”
Donnie eventually settled on the name Psychedelic Pimp Daddy Land for the Memorial Day weekend event. The first edition took place on May 24, 1997 at State Palace Theater in New Orleans. The psychedelic lineup featured techno live act Prototype 909, big beat live act Cirrus, and other favorites like Kimball Collins and Terry Mullan. The party was, of course, a hit and became an annual event. But because of Donnie’s (awesomely) severe case of creativity, the titles were always prone to change, “The reason I changed the title every year was so that the flier would look different. You had shows that just use the same name and the same art every year – which is smart, you know, people recognize the art and they’ll be like, ‘oh, I remember that party.’ But I didn’t wanna do the same things over and over. I wanted to keep changing it. And maybe that wasn’t the best business plan, but it made me sleep better at night.”
Over the years, themes included Pimp Daddy on Ice, Pimp Daddy’s European Vacation, Pimp Daddy’s Weekend Furlough, Pimp Daddy Needs to pay Child Support…the list goes on, “I chose whatever was topical, or whatever I thought was funny enough and I just themed it out to keep it a little more interesting.”
Though the titles were made in jest, other promoters thought of it as competition, “I was making fun of rave party names but I ended up creating a monster because other promoters started making even sillier titles.” But Donnie will always remember the show fondly, “Aside from Zoolu, that’s my favorite party.”
Psychedelic Pimp Daddy Land
Show As ListFeatured Updates

- Women of the Disco: Part 15
- From local scenes to worldwide signals, women are setting the industry's frequency.

- Women of the Disco: Part 14
- Women of the Disco is a celebration of these fierce women who are not just participants but innovators, defining the future of the scene.

- Women of the Disco: Part 13
- Women of the Disco is a celebration of these fierce women who are not just participants but innovators, defining the future of the scene.

- Women of the Disco: Part 12
- Women of The Disco is an initiative to highlight some of those powerhouses who are trailblazing the path and shaping the future of EDM.

- Women of The Disco: Part 11
- Women of The Disco is an initiative to highlight some of those powerhouses who are trailblazing the path and shaping the future of EDM.

- Women of The Disco: Part 10
- Women of The Disco is an initiative to highlight some of those powerhouses who are trailblazing the path and shaping the future of EDM.

- Announcing OUTLET - A Mental Health & Wellness Resource
- Providing information, tools, and resources relevant to mental health and promoting the continuance of mental health initiatives.

- Announcing Disco U!
- Disco Donnie Presents has always been in the business of furthering lives with the power of music, and we've recently extended that idea with the formation of our Disco U program.

- New Scholarship at Blair School of Music Honors Music Promoter Leon Jackson
- A new scholarship fund has been established at the Blair School of Music in honor of Leon Jackson, the late music and event promoter who introduced a generation of Nashvillians to electronic dance music.

- Disco Donnie Presents Honors First Responders, Veterans, and Gold-Star Families with $1,000,000 Ticket Donation
- Disco Donnie Presents Honors First Responders, Veterans, and Gold-Star Families with $1,000,000 Ticket Donation.
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