TAG: dance

Feb19

DJ Klever: With Teeth

Former DMC champ DJ Klever gets a shot at a different title (by Jen Boyles) 

Standing off to the side at Chicago’s Berlin bar in his blazing tattooed glory, DJ Klever is uncomfortable—a weird feeling for the seasoned party DJ who’s seen pretty much every possible shade of debauchery. Is he uneasy because a drag queen in a pink powdered wig just sauntered by, angrily muttering something about the bar not having Zima? Or because all the bartenders look like mischief-hungry dudes straight off one of those late-night Live-Links ads? Nope, Klever is made uncomfortable this winter night by the wide open space on the dancefloor—an unfamiliar notion for a DJ who is used to his own drag-em-out-by-their-hair kind of parties in his hometown of Atlanta (“Sloppy Seconds,” it’s called). Plus, he’s never played a gay bar and wasn’t prepped beforehand—Berlin is a total surprise.

“Does stuff normally get poppin’ late in Chicago?” he asks, nervously, …

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Jan02

Moby: Return of the Raver (Video)

Still the techno poster child after two decades, Moby steps back up to the turntables he helped make famous 

By Michael Vazquez

Hiro Ballroom, NYC November 15th, 2007, ‘round midnight…Moby, his fans and this writer all want the same thing—to be Him or a Significant Part Of Him, based on whatever their self-interested idea of “Him” is; for me he’s an interesting subject that I have to get quotes from; for the girl-in-a-band who came over and poured herself a drink from our scotch bottle, he’s the path to a record deal, while the girl standing in the front row waiting for Him to go on is just hoping to make eye contact.

And in between these three agendas is a myriad of fans of the godhead—the individual who most overtly represents the American rave movement and the ongoing rise and fall and rise of a music and culture, now experiencing its first trendy rebirth and subsequent nostalgia. Tonight he is …

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Dec06

Junior Boys: Coming and Going

Electro-pop protagonists Junior Boys try to leave, but cant escape their own mischievous melancholy (by janet tzou) 

Junior Boys, Jeremy Greenspan and Matt Didemus, are huddling into a deserted Italian restaurant on the outskirts of NYC’s Chinatown called The Grotto.
It’s horribly cramped inside, offering a tiny, narrow space framed with oppressive dark wood walls, shiny brass-trimmed portholes and creepy dim lamps shaped like ghostly porcelain ladies. The outside deck, however, is pleasantly roomy: Tall green shrubbery—a Manhattan rarity—manages to eclipse the gritty surrounding apartments. The Bee Gees’ “Staying Alive” buzzes faintly through fist-sized speakers.
Like most electronic artists, Greenspan and Didemus don’t look famous. Their 2004 debut, Last Exit, was released to gushing critical acclaim; they’re currently promoting their sophomore follow-up, So This Is Goodbye. (“We can’t keep this closure idea for the title going forever,” Greenspan observes. “Otherwise we’re gonna have to call our third album I’m Dead”). Greenspan, a stocky guy with a red, bushy beard, …

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Nov07

Yo Majesty: Ladies Rumble

If 2 Live Crew was made up of some badass lesbians, they might be as hot as Yo Majesty. 

By Daiana Feuer

Have you ever been to a show where they rock the same song three times by popular demand? Let’s call it an anthem – “Club Action” – welcoming you to the world of Yo Majesty, two poet-MC’s from the land of bug stings, Tampa Bay, Florida. Shunda K and Jwl B will not just handle your ass, but will hand you your ass if you disrespect. “You’re gonna treat me like a fucking lady,” booms Jwl B, “even though I’ll date your lady just to make her free. It’s not about sucking her pussy, G. It’s about respect now in my eye. Consideration, motherfucking respect and saving lives.”

That respect comes with the most unexpected of sounds. Booty dropping electro beats that, from “Me So Horny” to “Ass ‘N’ Titties,” have historically been the carrier of the the exact …

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Nov07

Pat Mahoney: Canned Heat

How a steady diet of Krautrock and disco turned LCD Soundsystem's drummer into a dance-punk machine. 

By Andrew Parks

One Diana Ross track—”Love Hangover,” if you must know—is all it took for Pat Mahoney to see the light. And by the light, we mean the starry eyes of long lost disco balls.

“It all clicked after that,” says Mahoney, James Murphy’s tag-team DJ partner and the four-on-the-floor pulse of LCD Soundsystem. (He’s also hit the skins for Hot Chip and the original lineup of Les Savy Fav.) “There’s more to disco than Saturday Night Fever.”

Surprisingly, it wasn’t until early this century when Mahoney underwent his disco revelation. A punk rocker who got his start at age 14 as a 7 Seconds-style singer, pissing off skinheads in a hardcore punk band called Distorted View (featuring Joe Sirois of the Mighty Mighty Bosstones on drums, no less), Mahoney hadn’t even caught the disco fever when he sat …

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