![]() It was quite literally like watching a person in the throes of a mental breakdown whilst dancing into the abyss – choreographed to the off-kilter production the producer is known for.Īs the set made its way to close, the trauma gave way to beauty as Flume debuted new song “Rushing Back” alongside Vera Blue, Reo Cragun lent a hand during “Quits,” and fans watched as a marvelous collection of lasers spun around Flume as he blasted off his wild “HyperParadise” remix. He moved across the stage with freedom, between the stations, breaking the bonds of what a producer can do with his music and how he can embody it. He proceeded to take a handheld saw to the table during “Smoke & Retribution” and later a sledgehammer to computers and TVs during “Wall Fuck.” Mixing into “Insane,” he sprawled out on the floor and a single light lit up half his profile meanwhile images of galaxies and broken glass swirled around his face as he lay in the wreckage, with peace coming in the form of four performers mimicking Tai Chi around his limp body.īesides mixing the music together and breaking apart his fractured tunes, Flume was seldom hostage to the instruments. As the set rolled, Flume seemingly began to unwind, smashing the flowers pots to the jagged breakdown of his remix of SOPHIE’s “Is It Cold In The Water?” as neon lights and lasers enveloped his rag. Then, Vera Blue arrived to the stage to lead the crowd into a rather magical version of “Never Be Like You,” as Flume began setting up flowers on the desk, at which point the set began to shift. As the dazzling lights danced around him and a robotic voice echoed his name, Flume began spray painting at the desk, before moving to his side panel to launch into “Sleepless.” Sparks flew when the beat finally dropped and the amphitheater danced into the night air.įollowing the “Sleepless,” Flume brought out slowthai for “High Beams,” crouching at the electronic instruments in the front as the rapper made his way through the crowd again. When the house lights eventually cut out, Flume, dressed in a metallic jumpsuit, nonchalantly took to the stage, where a shop desk outfitted with LED lights, three stations of electronic instruments (two on the side and one in front on the floor) and an outstretch rug laid upon the stage. Once the animosity subsided and the time for Flume had finally approached, the atmosphere in the amphitheater mellowed out. ![]() However, for those in the back, it went as far as sending one particularly vanilla listener to proclaim, “if you want people to listen, you can’t yell at them,” at which moment the performance had reached a point of no return and head shaking, soft-shouted heckling and booing began. For what it was worth, the lucky few in the first few rows, in which JPEGMAFIA cruised through and sent bruising beats and bars, felt the earth splitting decorum that JPEGMAFIA consistently brings to the stage. Best served in claustrophobic spaces, where the sweat of other bodies rains down in a mixture of disgust and euphoria - JPEGMAFIA - in the cracked open shell of Red Rocks, was lost in translation. A couple of blood-curdling screams in and people were bewildered. For those unaccustomed to the abrasive, mosh pit culling rapper, JPEGMAFIA’s set was at its best uncomfortable and at its worst, completely unwelcome. Tune into Diplo’s 2016 recap mix below, and check the full tracklist here.Following slowthai, was left-field hip-hop savant JPEGMAFIA. It’s the perfect snapshot of what went down in 2016, mixed by one of the world’s most sought-after producers. Grammy-nominated hits from Skrillex and Flume also land in the tracklist, balanced by dance floor gems from Donald Bucks and Benzi. Noteworthy electronic acts such as Anna Lunoe, Oshi, GTA and R3hab are featured in the mix, sprinkled between year-defining tracks from The Chainsmokers, A Tribe Called Quest, Rae Sremmurd, Drake, and Calvin Harris. Spanning a full two hours, the Major Lazer frontman nods to some of his favorite tunes of the year, patching together a colorful mix that covers tracks from Beyoncé to Dillon Francis and everything in between. To sum up an exciting year at the intersection of dance, hip-hop, and pop, Diplo took on the final Diplo & Friends mix of 2016 to plug a handful of the year’s most notable releases. Wesley Pentz seems perpetually ahead of the curve with what the next trending wave is going to be, and between Mad Decent’s catalog of releases this year, his own releases, and his side projects’ movements, its safe to say Diplo maintained his status as pop music’s foremost trendsetter in 2016. It’s hard to make the case that anyone has a more firm grip on music’s pulse than Diplo.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |