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Posts Tagged ‘axwell’
24 Jul

Swedish House Mafia at the Milton Keynes Bowl Review and Full Set Download!

By James Noonan (#DMMDanceOff Captain)

Well, where do I start? Let’s cut back to the 25th June 2012 where, not long after announcing their plans for the UK and European summer tour, djs Axwell, Sebastian Ingrosso & Steve Angelo, known collectively as the Swedish House Mafia, announced to the world their intention to split up. In a statement on their official website, the trio explained:

“Today we want to share with you, that the tour we are about to go on will be our last. We want to thank every single one of you that came with us on this journey. We came, we raved, we loved.” Swedish House Mafia

Fast forward to the morning of 14th of July where myself and some of my best friends excitedly boarded the coach at the Manchester Coach terminal with one destination in mind – the Milton Keynes Bowl Arena. Sharing banter and reliving memories on the journey, we all speculated about what was going to happen; what tracks were going to be played, what bombs might be dropped, what the crowd reactions were going to be like and what the overall experience would present to us.

We arrived at the Bowl at 1.45pm where we were greeted by a horde of policemen concealing a snaking sea of people who, like us, were eager to get inside the Bowl and get their rave on. Once our bags had been checked and we were inside, we headed to the bar to stock up on drinks to save the need to go back until later on that night.

How to describe the Bowl? If you have never been to the Milton Keynes Bowl or have never seen an image of it, imagine it as just that… A bowl. A huge crater surrounded by a sort of circling hill with an abundance of trees and plant-life on the outside and grass/mud on the inside. Once we went up through the wooded outskirts of the bowl and arrived at the top (greeted on the way by what can be said to be some of the funniest images I’ve ever seen in my life… Put it this way, I can now say I’ve seen a girl go for a number one and a number two at the same time) we were greeted by what I can honestly say is one of the greatest sights I’ve ever seen (I’d forgotten all about the shameless men and women at this point). The scene was of some 60,000 people, all jumping and raving to Example, as if they were just a huge sea moving to the beat of the music being produced from the enormous stage in front of them.

MKB-SHM-July-2012

The sun was shining, the people were still pouring in and spirits were high as Example’s set came to a close. Whilst the band began to dismantle their instruments and make way for the dj booth that Madeon would be occupying in a matter of minutes, we started to chat to people around us as well as amongst ourselves. From what people were saying we gathered that we weren’t the only ones who were as excited as youngsters on Christmas day.

Madeon’s set consisted of heavyset electro sounds which the crowd reacted well to, despite one clear technical mistake which cut the music briefly. A quick recovery got the show back on the road but maybe the young dj’s nerves got the better of him following that mistake in front of his biggest crowd to date as his mixing thereafter was quite poor and was clear that some tracks were not beat matched, but over all his set was fairly good and his new track FINALE went off!!

Before the start of Alesso’s set we had journeyed to the front of the crowd to get the best view possible and to get our rave on. Alesso, Calvin Harris and Pete Tong all played hour and a bit sets, warming the crowd up to the frenzy by dropping some absolutely class tunes as well as getting choruses of ‘Seven nation army’ and Zombie Nation’s ‘Kernkraft 4000’ going from the crowd, raising spirits and making people dance like they’d never danced before.

Alesso took the day to a whole new level with an awesome set, but gutted not to hear his collab with Dirty South – City Of Dreams get a play out, Harris also had a great set and built the crowd to a frenzy dropping both tracks to please everyone, but sadly Pete Tong  let the lineup down, playing mostly tech which lead to a huge thinning of the crowd throughout his set and managed to bring it back towards the end with Eric Prydz’s new track Everyday!

At 8.15pm a huge black curtain was dropped, covering the stage in order to prepare for the Swede’s arrival to the crowd. A ‘Class Photo’ of the crowd was taken with one of the highest resolutioned cameras in the world, which would allow each member of the audience to clearly see themselves online in said photo, even if they were at the far end of the bowl (check it out for yourself).

While addressing the crowd and introducing SHM, Tong was thanking all the acts from that day for performing getting loud cheers as he mentioned their names, No_IDExample, MadeonAlessoCalvin Harris. But when mentioning his own name, Pete Tong…..the crowd answered with Boo’s, not very good for the guy who is supposed to be the ambassador to British Dance Music.

But then it happened; , the huge black curtain dropped and in front of our eyes was what can only be described as a huge black tower. When it hit. The unmistakable sound of the start of SHM’s ‘Greyhound’, the tower displaying some incredible LED graphics and the crowd going wild. The music rose even higher, building to the crescendo until the drop kicked in.

The crowd went insane! Bouncing around like they were mere ragdolls and throwing some of the most amazing shapes ever witnessed by man. The huge towering structure started to split horizontally from the middle (the top section rising) to display the three Swedes in a haze of smoke and lights, heads bobbing, yet mouths open at the incredible sight before them. It has to be said, that this was raving at it’s peak. In all my time raving, I can honestly say I have never experienced a gig or a set like it. Everything was perfect; from the crowd around us to the superstars themselves, from the music to the cheering. It was honestly one of those once-in-a-lifetime experiences that nor I, nor my friends will ever forget.

MKB-SHM-July-2012-union-jack

The Swede’s played big! Smashing out not only their own hits and remixes (One, Antidote Save the World  and their own remix of Coldplay’s ‘Every Teardrop is a Waterfall’ included, at which point the LED screens displayed an amazing Union Jack and Axwell hopped on the decks to “raise the flag”), but also Axwell’s own ‘In my mind’ and Dirty South’s ‘Walking alone’.

The air around us was buzzing with the spark of electricity and amazement as the neons fell over the crowd, the multicoloured flamethrowers rose in front of our eyes and as we all raved in unison, yet at the same time as a separate entity. The feeling was indescribable, but was one of the greatest highs I ever had! Looking around, you could always spot someone who had dressed up as a comical character (such as the Mario brothers who were right near us at one point) or people who had brought little trinkets of humours (such as the guy with the ‘I Love a one night stand’ cardboard notice). Even our unofficial mascot ‘Smelly’ the hand puppet made an appearance! But it was just little things like that that made the overall experience even greater. My friend Chris and myself had bought a pair of monkey masks, which we donned mid-performance with comical bowler hats and fez’s to get a laugh from those around us, adding glow sticks under the eye holes later on for the cameras!

Not wanting the night to end we raved into the night throwing amazing shapes and even initiating comical dance offs between ourselves and some cheeky girls from Essex, when all of a sudden the music stopped and Axwell got on the microphone to thank us from himself, Steve and Sebastian. The speech seemed as though they were truly grateful to all their fans who had turned up to celebrate their last UK gig and was full of emotion and compassion for their fellow ravers. He then announced that the night was drawing to a close (this was met by lots of booing and jeering), but that they had one final surprise in store for us.

As a way of saying thank you to all their fans around the world and especially to us who had turned up that night, they were going to premier their newest (and unfortunately last) single, ‘Don’t you Worry Child’ to all of us there at the Bowl. The crowd went wild as the intro played into our ears and we were met by the sound of what could be one of their best tracks yet. It featured vocals from John Martin (who also did the vocals to ‘Save the World tonight’) as well as some amazing piano and guitar accompaniments. Hearing it back now I still feel like I’m back there, raving in my wellies whilst jumping up and down with my arms around some of my best friends in the world, all my worries gone and just living in the moment.

Then just as suddenly as it had started, it stopped. The music faded down, all three djs got on the microphone to personally thank the crowd for not only coming out, but supporting them throughout their career as the Swedish House Mafia as well as letting us know all their fans will hold special places in their hearts… A bit soppy but it was good to hear.

That was it. It was all over. The lights came up, we surveyed our surroundings, a huddle of girls crying, a crowd running over to the wall just near the stage to have that pee they were so desperately craving (luckily it was just lads this time…) and the faces of the crowd, who, like ourselves had contorted faces of pure astonishment as if the spectacle they had just witnessed was some sort of amazing dream that was too good to have take place. I still remember every minute detail, even now, two weeks later. It was honestly one of the greatest spectacles I have ever, and will probably ever witness. As I sit here writing this, I set my mind to the Creamfields bank holiday in August where I will be spending three days doing what I did that day, but honestly worried that it won’t compare.

I hope this article (I know its long and I apologise, but shh…) gave you an inkling as to what it was like to be there that day and doesn’t make you too jealous. It’s sad to think the Swedish House Mafia (in my opinion one of, if not the greatest collaborating acts in the history of dance music) might never reunite and tour the UK again, but I can honestly say I’m glad I was there to share with them ,as well as the 65,000 other ravers around me, the magic that was that night.

 [*Edit - "Ever so slightly gutted I wasn't here but glad Mr Noonan had such an awesome time and a huge welcome to the DMM team!" - James]

Download the full set from:
TurbobitRapidgator

24 Jun

Swedish House Mafia to split up in 2012

Swedish House Mafia

The Swedish House Mafia are splitting up after 5 years (not 4 BBC…) together under the SHM name. The trio formed even before then, with Steve Angello, Sebastian Ingrosso and Axwell playing together in clubs from Stockholm to the rest of the World. After fellow Swede, Eric Prydz’ success with Call on Me, the trio took the World by storm taking house music to the masses with tracks like One, with Pharell Williams (N.E.R.D.) and smashing it out in Madison Square Gardens, an insane arena show, especially from a dance music artist.

The Swedes broke the news after headlining the Dance Arena at Radio 1′s Hackney Weekend, part of the London 2012 festival, announcing via their website that their next tour will be their last. The last time you can see the Swedish House Mafia together as the SHM in the UK will be at Milton Keynes Bowl on 14 July, with several further dates in Ibiza before their ultimate gig in Stockholm on November 24th.

 We want to thank every single one of you that came with us on this journey. We came, we raved, we loved
Swedish House Mafia, June 2012

You can read through our Swedish House Mafia archive on DMM or read more about their final UK gig at the Milton Keynes Bowl on the 14th July. DMM don’t doubt that the power of the commercialisation of the Swedish House Maifa will enhance their future success as individuals but hopefully we will see more of their individual flair, skill and talent as DJs / producers. If we see a return to the deeper, underground roots of the trio, the Dance Music Manchester team will be very happy indeed.

16 Apr

Kryder Interview, Download and Tall Trees Lineup Announcement!

Here at Dance Music Manchester, you’ll regularly see the names Tiesto, The Swedish House Mafia, Judge Jules, Pete Tong, Calvin Harris, Laidback Luke, Avicii, Zane Lowe, Eric Morillo, Hardwell and Groove Armada. In fact, follow any decent dance music magazine, blog or website and you’ll see these superstar’s names in abundance. Well no, this incredible array of dance music heroes is not the next festival line-up, (now there’s a thought…) but that is just a handful of the supporters Kryder has put under his spell recently.

Featuring in  Radio 1 essential mixes,  Mixmag scoring his main room monster ‘K2’ an unbeatable 5/5, destroying  the World famous Privilege in Ibiza, supporting Tiesto, the backing is as strong as the show, which Kryder rocks every time.

His combination of dark, big room progressive and the mysterious looking stage show, captivates the audience before the big drops kick in and elevate the revelers to a higher state. Joining the  ‘Fire It Up’ circuit, on top of supporting dance legends and DMM favourites, Axwell and Hardwell, 2012 is looking hot for the man behind the visor.

DMM caught up with Kryder, to talk about the year ahead, Tall Trees, the incredible stage show and more.

How is 2012 going for you, it would seem a lot is happening from over here! Tell us more….
So far so good…I’m in the studio most days and when not, I’m looking for inspirations for my tracks. I’ve already played some great gigs and got some amazing ones coming up. I’ve been working on some solo tunes and also a few collaborations coming out soon, which I am very excited about.

What do you have planned for Tall Trees?
High-energy, driving dance music and I’m not ruling out a bit of dwarf crowd surfing! People are becoming increasingly interested  in your stage show.

Will the “circus freak show entourage” be in attendance for Tall Trees? 
100%! Tall Trees is a perfect set up for a bit of mayhem and I’m not one to hold back!

How did all this stage show materialise?
I love surrounding myself with extraordinary people, so it was kind of an accident and inevitable. I’m always getting random mad ideas and as long as whoever is around me at the time is up for it then it happens.

Your production work is incredibly strong, what is your musical training background?
Thank you! Music has always been a huge part of my life. I started DJing from the age of 12 and wasn’t very academic, so when I left school I went on to music college where I studied music tech.  I’ve tried piano and guitar lessons. You name it, I’ve tried it, plus I can bang a good tambourine!

If you had to choose, what is the most important part of a track for you in the production process?
For me in Dance music it’s all about the kick drum, as without the right one your track is a no starter.

What is the most memorable moment of your career?
So far, it would have to be DJing at Privilege in Ibiza last year to 8000 people & meeting Tiësto.

Your style sounds almost alternative in comparison to a lot of popular dance music of today, but yet still rocks the floors. Who or what are you greatest influences and how do you describe your formula?

I take inspiration from all styles and genres, I’m also not afraid to experiment. My formula is huge kick drums, rolling percussion, euphoric breakdowns and teeth shattering basslines!

Who would you most like to work with in music (can be dead or alive)?
Christian Burns, as I think he such a talented singer and songwriter. I would love the opportunity to work with such talent.

What is your favourite track of 2012 so far?
One of my favourite has to be by Shilo ‘Foreshadowing’, it’s got Trance elements mixed with pounding Electro bass lines and it rocks dance floors!

What was the last good joke you heard?
What’s six inches long and goes in one direction?
Simon Cowell.

Do you have any weird and wonderful possessions or collections?
Weird is probably my collection of top hats and visors. Wonderful is the huge collection of vinyl that I just can’t let go of.

What’s summer 2012 hold for you? Ibiza? Croatia?
Ibiza, Croatia and hopefully a trip back to Vegas. I’m really looking forward to joining Eddie Halliwell in his Fire it Up arena at this year’s Creamfields on Saturday 25th August!

And finally… leave the Tall Trees faithful with a parting comment before you see them all on May 6th
To get you all in the mood for some serious partying at Tall Trees, download a free copy of my latest bootleg and I’ll see you at the front!

Fedde Le Grand, Deniz Koyu , Johan Wedel vs Empire of the Sun – Turn of the Empire (Kryder Bootleg)

Kryder’s video of his recent set at Ministry of Sound, London!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eU1uFD5X3I

Check out Kryder’s exclusive mix for Gatecrasher ahead of Fire It Up!
http://soundcloud.com/kryder/kryder-gatecrasher-mix-2012

Goodgreef Presents Fire It Up @ Tall Trees, Yarm – Sunday, May 6, 2012

 

The Club – Fire It Up
Eddie Halliwell –  www.eddiehalliwell.com
Special Guest Sander Van Doorn www.sandervandoorn.com
Michael Woods www.michaelwoods.com
Kryder / D.O.D
James Rigby

Island Bar – Goodgreef Future Trance
Bryan Kearney vs. Jordan Suckley
Chris Metcalfe / Solis & Sean Truby
Phil Mackintosh / Craig Lucas
Digi-Funk DJs / Chris Hutchinson

Outdoor Stage – House Party
Davie Little / Si Whelan
Nick Hampton / Andy McCarthy
Paul Buhdoye B2B Craig Hunter
Tony Citro B2B Dan Smith

Tickets:
Limited Early Birds
(SOLD OUT)
Advanced tickets Timoco £20 +bf /MOTD
https://goodgreef.timoco.eu/event/2308
http://www.skiddle.com/events/11610258/

VIP Tickets £35 + bf:http://www.skiddle.com/events/11610258/

Youtube Video Line Up announced:
http://youtu.be/9CVqGQN6BE0

08 Apr

The Warehouse Project Good Friday 2012 Review – Axwell, Eric Prydz, James Zabiela And More…

Saying that Friday night @ The Warehouse Project was epic would be a massive understatement. Bringing what could only be described as an indoor festival to Trafford Park, with a ridiclous lineup of superstar DJ’s, an incredible main stage and visuals, 3  packed rooms of deliriously happy ravers, dancing in the dirty authentic warehouse just outside Manchester city centre, (literally opposite Old Trafford), delivered a very Good Friday of clubbing.

Getting to the venue seemed trickier than it should be, a lot of people struggled with bus timetables and taxi’s didn’t seem to know the venue existed. If you are going this evening or to any future events at the new Trafford Whard Road venue, simply  ask them to drive to, “Trafford Road, near to Chester Road, opposite Old Trafford”, it’s signed from here and will most likely be heaving with revellers. You will know it when you get there!

Gaining entry to the venue, was just like a festival, think Creamfields, in the dark, with a muddy warehouse in Manchester instead of a muddy field in Warrington.  Security are everywhere, slightly intimidating on first approach but stay out of trouble and they won’t be any but should keep the venue safe. Once you are past the sniffer dogs and huge door staff, welcome to the party.

The Venue
Ok, so the venue is huge. There is a monster of a club room dubbed Room 1, where headliners Axwell and Prydz burst DMM’s eardrums. The room is as mad as one of the larger tents at Creamfields /Global Gathering, with bars at the back so you can refill your drinks without having to leave the party. Room 2 and 3 are smaller in scale but no less manic, a little more intimate, the DJ’s are closer and the whole room felt more of a large underground house party than an epic and slightly intimidating festival of madness that was Room 1. Do not mis-understand this, Room 2 and 3 are still absolutely incredible, friendlier, exciting club night in themselves, so when conjoining them all together…What a venue.

There is also a good chillout area at the back, reminiscent of the old chill out area at Store St. Very dark, watch the tables about shin height in the middle of the room (#healthandsafetywarning) but again another bar, slightly quieter music and a good place to catch your breath, chat up some nice girls / guys, start a mini dance off or simply meet up with lost friends. Whatever floats your boat. our hula hoop dance off in Room 2 was incredible, about 15 random people joined in without hesitation and turned it into the robot / chicken dance / random break-dancing and body-popping circle of comedy rather than serious dancing. Needless to say, bar a few over-exhilerated clubbers, it was a great atmosphere


The Music
We could have promised that the music would have been insane. In fact we did and the line-up did not disappoint. John Digweed, Joris Voorn and Nic Fanciulli lead the team in Room 2, with deep, intimate sets. WHP resident Krysko and Jeremy Olander opened the show in Room 1, with a stunning set from James Zabiela warming the crowd up for the legend that is Eric Prydz.

Prydz stole the show with what we thought was an unbeatable set of dirty, loud and well produced house music. Stunning visuals on the humongous (not sure it’s even a word but we’re sticking with it) screens, light effects and smoke machines filling the hall. The crowd erupted with Pyjanoo, while DMM tried to squeeze our way to the front doing the “can’t-really-move-but-going-to-try-and-dance-on-the-spot-anyways dance”.

Swedish House Mafia DJ and Dance Music Manchester favourite, Axwell then took to the decks, with his intro riff on repeat, “Manchester are you ready? / Are you ready Manchester”.

Manchester was not ready. It took off.
James, DMM

With a blend of his ecclectic DJ set and an array of his more well-known solo / SHM chart singles, Nothing But Love, Leave The World Behind, One, Miami To Ibiza and recent chart destroyer Antidote. (FYI: We still haven’t found an antidote, watch this space…) . The crowd loved it, as did we, with Axwell’s experience playing in front of ridiculous crowds of varying sizes showing through, taking the crowd to new highs then slowing it down with the build up for the next screamer of a tune. #unbelievable.


Warehouse Revellers

The People
The crowd was a good mix, the underground house party scene, the meat-head blokes, pretty hippie dance festival girls to the stunning but far too dressed up WAG lasses, who may have over-estimated the dress code. Word of advice, keep it light, no jumpers. Keep it smart but not your favourite dress / shoes and if you wear white pumps. They will be brown / black when you leave. It’s a proper rave, more of a festival than a club and definitely not a posh bar. Look good but don’t regret it the next day!


The Night
Incredible, mad,  atmospheric, dirty and loud. Minus the bottlenecks between bars / rooms / loos, a phenomenal achievement to top Store St. Can the WHP team keep it up? Hopefully. We can however emphasize how excited we are for round 2 tonight.

 

The Warehouse Project Photo Gallery on Facebook
Warehouse Project Easter Lineup and Venue Photos
Easter Weekend in Manchester Clubbing Preview

05 Apr

EPIC Friday Night @ Warehouse Project, Eric Prydz, Axwell, Zabiela, Digweed, Voorn, Fanciulli & More!

Axwell @ Warehouse Project 2012

Axwell @ Warehouse Project

Dance Music Manchester have been waiting for this weekend since the very first Warehouse Project announcement of 2012 and well, it’s nearly here and my God we’re excited. Facebook, Twitter and the rest of the web have been going absolutely mental about the lineup for both Good Friday and Easter Sunday at WHP’s brand new venue on Trafford Wharf Road and with good reason. If you haven’t seen tomorrow night’s insane cast of DJ’s, where on Earth have you been?

For those who have had their head in the sand for the past few weeks, here it is again, the lineup for Good Friday (6th April 2012):

Room 1
Eric Prydz
Axwell  #dmmhero
James Zabiela
Thomas Gold
Jeremy Olander
Krysko

Room 2
John Digweed
Joris Voorn
Nic Fanciulli
Greg Lord
Lewis Boardman

The monstrous lineup is full of WHP veterans, world class DJ’s and heroes of Dance Music Manchester’s so should be an absolutely epic night. Get down early, party hard and recover in time for Saturday night / Sunday night!

How to get to the venue

Warehouse Project Easter Weekend Lineup and Venue Photos 

Easter Weekend in Manchester Clubbing Preview

@dancemusicmanc / facebook.com/dancemusicmanchester