Ultimate Music Experience Artist Profile: Carnage

Ultimate Music Experience Artist Profile: Carnage

artist carnageFrom being handpicked to play some of the biggest festivals in the world, to switching gears and making a name for himself in the big room house circuit, there is no denying the impact Ultimate Music Experience talent Carnage has had on dance music in 2013. And the best part? He’s only getting started.

Born Diamanté Blackmon in Guatemala City, Guatemala, a young Carnage always had music in his life, “I was raised in Guatemala until I was 8, and yeah it was pretty chill and we used to listen to whatever – it was never a ‘no music’ kind of thing, just whatever was playing, ya know?” After moving to rural Maryland, Carnage started producing on Fruity Loops, mostly out of boredom, “Living in the country, there was nothing really to do. I used to rap, so I thought making my own beats would both be cool and pass the time. I started a group with my friend Bruce, who also rapped, and I started hosting his mixtapes. He [pushed] me into sampling music and pulling eclectic points of reference into the music I was making. From here I got into making beats and developing them into proper tracks, and as time passed, the platform for this music became more and more relevant.”

Carnage first came to our attention in 2012 with his remix of Hardwell’s massive single “Spaceman.” Dubbing his sound “festival trap,” the Los Angeles based talent burst onto the scene and things haven’t slowed down since. Even UME veteran Tiësto has dropped some productions from the Chipotle lover. With his outright refusal to be pigeonholed to one genre, Carnage has steered away from his original trap style, If I want to make a rap record I make it; if I want to make a house record I make it. If I want to make some pretty shit I make some pretty shit.”

His latest releases are dripping with that big room “festival-style” sound in genres like deep and electro house, drum and bass and anything else that strikes his fancy. Calling 2013 his most life changing year, Carnage is marching into 2014 with a documentary and an artist album to be released later this year, “Imagine… a fucking Carnage after movie, like my EDC one – not just about one festival [though], but about this last year and what really happens behind the scenes. And all of your favorite people are in it (trust me, everyone’s in it).”

Come dance to the sounds of the #ChipotleGang leader at this year’s Ultimate Music Experience on March 13-15th. Tickets are on sale and moving fast, so grab yours today!

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Alex Metric at SISU Uptown

Thievery Corporation, Galactic at Sugar Mill

Gent & Jawns at The Station

The Station

Disco Donnie Presents Celebrates 20 Years in Electronic Music Culture

Disco Donnie Presents turns 20 this Spring and to help celebrate our milestone, we’ll be hosting 20th anniversary themed events, content, and features throughout the year so that you all join in on the party – plus, it’s way more fun than the traditional anniversary gifts of china or platinum.

The celebration kicks off with Zoolu 20, the legendary three-day Mardi Gras party in New Orleans on March 1-3rd. This year’s anniversary lineup includes headliners like Krewella, Pegboard Nerds and Mark Farina, but since we’re feeling nostalgic, we’re also have a Zoolu All Stars lineup featuring some of the event’s founding DJs, such as Micro, Charles Feelgood, Nigel Richards, and Terry Mullan.

For the next year, follow us to grab exclusive 20th anniversary online content from us all year long, including retrospective Beatport charts, unearthed old school party fliers, and interviews with Donnie and other dance music pioneers about the early days of electronic dance music.

No matter if you’ve danced with us for 20 years or two months, we’re excited to share the Disco Donnie Presents journey throughout our scene’s history, music, challenges, growth, and Donnie’s pivotal role in protecting our First Amendment right to dance.

Keys N Krates

While it may look that way on stage, nothing is ever simple with Keys N Krates. Not when everyone has an equally valid opinion, along with the willingness (no, the all-consuming need) to sit and scrutinize a hearty 808 hit or laser like synth line for hours on end.

It’s been this way since the very beginning, when Keys N Krates went from being a live hip-hop band reliant on rough acapellas and memory-jogging remixes to something much more complex. A tight-knight trio of producers and performers – turntablist Jr Flo, keyboard player David Matisse, drummer Adam Tune – who take rocking a party as seriously as a week spent in the studio. “We always trade roles from song to song,” explains Jr. Flo. “It’s not uncommon for Matisse to flip a sample, or for me to write a melody, or for Tune to chime in on the mixing of a track. It’s not the fastest way of working, but everyone has a say in everything.”

Which explains why their breakthrough singles (the elastic loops and diamond-edged drums of “Dum Dee Dum,” the head rush hooks of “Treat Me Right,” a frantic, D’n’B-flavored “Are We Faded”) are able to pull the strings of packed festival crowds without resorting to tired EDM tropes. Hip-hop, house and UK bass music all play a role in a Keys N Krates record, but so do the dark-tinged dynamics and widescreen ways of indie acts like Caribou and M83. “Seeing M83 live at the Osheaga festival changed our whole perception of how their music translates live,” says Jr. Flo. “The chord progressions are beautiful and catchy but never corny. It’s pop music at its best.”

That was essentially the goal with the Toronto group’s new Midnite Mass EP: cuts that are calibrated for clubs but that can translate beyond. Punchy and powerful. Emotional and epic. That goes for everything from its title track (an intro that sounds like a suspenseful thesis) to a Katy B collab (“Save Me”) that’ll beam old-school ravers straight back to the ’90s. And then there’s something as deceivingly simple as “Love Again,” a soulful rap beat created from scratch and such artful details as the orchestral flourishes of Ouici and the gospel vocals of a friend named JP. Let’s just say it’s no coincidence that the song sounds like it sampled a dust-caked ’70s record from a long-buried discount bin; That Just Blaze or Kanye might find and flip, Keys N Krates want to leave you wondering just how they do it.

“We wanted people to wonder where we got a lot of the sounds for this EP, the same way we have when listening to producers like Just Blaze and Timbaland. Those guys have always used source samples or sounds that leave you scratching your head. We love that simplicity; it’s like true Italian cooking, a few ingredients to make something so impactful… beats that leave you wondering ‘where the fuck did he get that sound from?'”

Sandro Silva

It’s the magic from the young Dutchman Sandro Silva that is the future sound of electro. Blazing hot with releases on Dimmak, Mixmash, Ultra and Atlantic Records and pounding the stage at EDC Las Vegas, Creamfields, Ushuaia Ibiza and London’s iconic Ministry of Sound, its undeniable the roads are fast, but there’s no brakes in this music career.

Electrifying with Mixmash icon Laidback Luke, Sandro Silva filled a gap in the dance music world, lead in a solid electronic direction by the main man while blasting his natural talent. Owning breakthrough status on Pete Tong’s Essential Selection show with ‘Prom Night’ saw the track blow up as Essential Choice followed by buzz from dance music legends Eric Prydz, David Guetta, Sebastian Ingrosso and Tiesto. His track ‘Epic’, a collaboration with Quintino released on Musical Freedom grabbed YouTube with over 15 million views, crashing charts globally and hitting platinum in Holland and Gold in Belgium.

Anticipated by icons across electronic music, Sandro’s next release on Spinnin Records with ‘Puna’ is large, as is ‘Payback’ out later in the year on Hardwell’s Revealed Recordings; after a heart-pounding drop at Tomorrowland by the king himself. The winter months will see a massive release on Calvin Harris’s Fly Eye Records, after EDM’s champion has kept a close but sure reach on him following originals and remixes for himself, Laidback Luke, Ricky Blaze and more.

With ears pricked, Zedd recently won the tour bet taking Sandro on a date run in late 2013 throughout Mexico on the Clarity tour after experiencing the Silva spirit at David Guetta’s F**k Me I’m Famous in Ibiza. Never shy of an iconic show, Sandro also will grace Australia’s coastline for a heated start to their springtime! Off the back of an epic Electric Zoo show in New York, Sandro has brought to life his US stint while igniting the Mixmash Records tour throughout the North America with Laidback Luke and Oliver Twizt.

Every dance floor has a Silva lining.

Boys Noize

Alex Ridha — better known to the world as BOYS NOIZE — has been making electronic music and working as a DJ for over half of his life.

He established himself as one of the world’s preeminent wizards behind the decks, having played the world’s biggest stages alongside the biggest names in dance music.

His sets are equally uplifting, not only technically but also as a showman, leaving unforgettable experiences for the witnesses. One of the reasons why the Rolling Stone voted BOYS NOIZE amongst the Top10 `DJS WHO RULE THE EARTH` in 2012.

As a recording artist and producer, Ridha has created his own sound, and pioneered his own brand, amassing a formidable body of work in the process.

He has released three albums (2007’s Oi Oi Oi , 2009’s Power and 2012´s Out Of The Black) and countless singles as BOYS NOIZE, as well as doing profoundly influential work as a remixer and producer for everyone from Depeche Mode, Daft Punk, Feist, David Lynch to Jarvis Cocker, Santigold, Scissor Sisters and Chilly Gonzales.

He has collaborated with Snoop Dogg, genius film maker Mr. Oizo (on a project called Handbraekes), Erol Alkan, and most recently Skrillex (under the moniker of Dog Blood) and won Beatport’s ‘Best Electronic Act’ 3 years in a row.

Ridha is also the heart of Boysnoize Records, the label that he started back in 2005. Founded originally as a means to get his own music out into the world, Boysnoize Rec.–and it’s sub-label, BNR Trax–is now home to more than a dozen artists (including up-and-comers like 18-year old SCNTST, Le1f, Spank Rock, Strip Steve, Peaches and Siriusmo) and responsible for over 100 releases while remaining fully independent.

“I don´t compromise when it comes to music,” says Ridha. “I do what I think is cool and what I like and not what the market wants or people may expect. Maintaining artistic freedom has always been the most important thing to me — for my own music and for anyone on my label”

Despite his ever-expanding label roster and the increased demand for his time as a producer and remixer, Ridha’s primary loves continue to be the twin pursuits of making and performing music.

Following the release of his third long-player Out Of The Black in late 2012, he presented the first BOYS NOIZE ‘LIVE’ show to the masses.

“I really wanted to give people a concert where I perform my music only. It´s not that I don´t like DJing anymore, I´m a DJ to the bone and will always be. But playing my tracks live and putting on a completely new show was something I wanted to do for a long time. It´s different and fresh and that is what I love.”

Ultimate Music Experience Artist Profile: Tiësto

artist tiestoYou’d be hard-pressed to find a dance music fan who hasn’t heard of Ultimate Music Experience talent Tiësto. From the early days of his career, all Tiësto said that he wanted to do was, ‘to share his music with others.’ Now 20 years after his first release, and having won nearly every dance music award there is, it’s clear to see that Tiësto has put in the work and dedication to called one of the greatest DJs to be behind a set of turntables.

Born Tijs Verwest, Tiësto knew he had a strong love of music at an early age, “…since I was 5, I think. At home, I’d always listen to music – music has always been important to me and I always enjoyed playing music for other people and see that they have a good time – that’s what it’s all about.” In 1988, now 19, Tijs bought his first turntable and taught himself how to mix, though doing so, proved to be a little difficult, “I only had one tape recorder and one turntable – I couldn’t afford two turntables. So, I had to record everything from the radio, and I had vinyl – it was very hard, there was no pitch control on the turntable either. It was very difficult in the beginning, to pitch without a pitch control. Then, after a couple of years, I had enough money saved to buy a turntable with pitch control, and then the world opened up for me.”

Though known for his feats in the trance genre, Tiësto’s early releases in 1994 were hardcore/gabber-influenced tracks under the aliases Da Joker and DJ Limited, “I started out as a remixer, not as a producer, because in the beginning, I didn’t have a clue how to make my own tracks,” he admits. “And remixing is much easier to do because you [already] have the melody, so you just have to give your own flavor on it.” After being mentored in the studio from artists like Armin Van Buuren, Paul Oakenfold and Ferry Corsten, Tiësto decided it was time to start working on his own productions.

His debut album In My Memory, released in 2001, had five #1 singles in “Dallas 4PM,” “Flight 643,” “Obsession,” “Lethal Industry,” and “Suburban Train.” Skyrocketing in his success, Tiësto became DJ Mag’s #1 DJ for three years following his debut. In 2004, his second album Just Be featured anthem singles “Traffic” and “Adagio For Strings.” That same year saw Tiësto’s global presence explode to new heights as he became the first DJ to perform live at the Olympic Games for the 2004 Opening Ceremony. In fact, Tiësto has been a lot of “firsts.” His remix of Delerium’s “Silence” was the first dance track to be broadcast on daytime radio in North America, he was the first DJ to hold a solo concert in a stadium, and he set the world record for the largest audience every played to by a DJ. There is just no stopping the Dutch veteran, and why would you want to? He continues to knock out hit singles and evolve his sound year later as seen by his more recent albums Elements of Life and Kaleidoscope.

Back in June, Tiësto released the third volume of his revered Club Life series in “Stockholm.” Reaching #16 on the Billboard Top 200 Chart, Tiësto says, “I didn’t just want it to be a mix with tracks my fans could find on every other compilation or were just the hottest tracks of the moment. Rather, I wanted this to be heavy on my own productions, remixes and collaborations.”

Holding it down at his imprint Musical Freedom with recent releases “Move to the Rhythm,” “Red Lights,” and a forthcoming remix with twoloud, Tiësto is starting 2014 off right. Join us this March 13-15th to move to the rhythm with one of the greatest DJs of all time at Ultimate Music Experience. Tickets are on sale now, buy your tickets today!

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