Event Turning Ronnie Abaldonado Loose – Day 1

June 26, 2009 - 11:51 am


Left to Right: David “MEX ONE” Alvarado, Jose’ “Keebz” Chapa, and Ronnie Abaldanado”

Ronnie Abaldonado (Red Bull B-Boy RonnieBoy representing Full Force & Super Cr3W) descended into the sweltering Orlando heat for the worldwide premiere of “Turn it Loose“, a documentary about six world class B-Boys battling it out to become the Red Bull BC One Champion.

Joined by the winners of this year’s “Soul Cypher Jam”, Ronnie got down to business in Thornton Park’s “Graffiti Junktion.”  Ronnie is considered a fixture within the international community of B-Boys so it’s no surprise that local breakers like David “MEX ONE” Alvarado and Jose’ “Keebz” Chapa are on a first name basis with the former Red Bull BC One Champ.  With conversation around the table ranging from the resurgence of B-Boy culture in mainstream media to event promotion and merchandising, it’s clear that for these guys  B-Boying is about more than just dance.

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Event Featured The Revolution Freezes Over

June 14, 2009 - 7:38 pm


The Mirage Casino has a little club called The Beatles Revolution Lounge. It sits next to the theater where Cirque du Soleil performs their homage to the Beatles with a show called Love. In fact, Cirque du Soleil actually created the space, meant to evoke a club out of London in the 1960’s, with a touch of the psychedelic and a dash of the Yellow Submarine (although much to their credit its neither yellow nor blatantly submarine-esque).

Imagine my surprise when I got invited there for an evening of true Hip-Hop integrity, complete with a B-Boy competition, vinyl spinning DJ, and the legendary Mr. Freeze from the original break-dancing visionaries, The Rock Steady Crew.  You get an invite like that you simply can’t refuse.

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Event Gallery Moving on…

June 5, 2009 - 3:29 pm


If you love dance music, Detroit on Memorial Day weekend is like Christmas, Thanksgiving and July 4th rolled into one.  This year was no exception, both for what happened and what didn’t at the Detroit Electronic Music Festival, or Movement 09.

Of the numerous firsts: Carl Cox and Derrick May’s festival debuts. Although both had been scheduled to play in previous years, Cox cancelled because of stomach problems (caused, some speculate, by the news that Carl Craig, his long-time friend, had just been fired). And May, the last of the original techno trio and only one to never play the festival, got rained out by a thunderstorm. To sweeten the pie, Carl Craig was named creative director of Movement 2010. On this last year of the festival’s first decade, history was well served.

Movement 09 in Detroit

Hip-hop was better represented than it has been. Rising talents like Flying Lotus, top-of-their-game superstars like RJD2 and Z-Trip, and a visit by no less than Afrika Bambaataa, one of the men who started it all, kept the Red Bull Music Academy stage packed both day and night. The reception proved that the festival can easily accomodate diversity, especially when the genres share the same roots.

That stage’s success points out one thing that didn’t happen: drum and bass.  Lots of out-of-towners were missing as well. Most of the people who come regularly from places like California, New  York and even Chicago didn’t make it this year. When people have to give up something so close to their hearts like the festival, you realize how bad things really are.

Detroit's Movement 09

But mostly what didn’t happen this year was the array of all night parties the festival was famous for. This time, the blame goes straight to the city of Detroit, for refusing to let the bars close at four. While there were plenty of private and underground parties, much of that  action took place behind closed or suburban doors, and the 24/7 freak show was conspicuous by its absence.

Finally, there was no Richie Hawtin, who was wrapped up in the launch of his fancy fashion line. A genuine Detroit hero, in spite of his triggering a mass exodus to Berlin, his year off was taken in stride, with the tacit understanding that he would be back bigger, better and, presumably better dressed next year.

Movement 2009

But those a quibbles in an otherwise perfect universe. The level of talent, the quality of the music, and the intelligence of the audience has made Detroit a juggernaut. A feather in any DJ’s cap, its survival assured, there’s no surprise that talk is already turning to next year’s tenth anniversary edition. Here’s what they are saying in four words: Make your reservation now.

Movement Festival in Detroit

Words by Neil Feineman, photos by Dustin Downing

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Event Music Sweet and Sticky: Bassnectar Delivers the Juice

June 5, 2009 - 3:08 pm

Bassnectar at Red Bull Music Academy

Whether you were grinding along with the heaps of patrons in the audience, sacrificing your drinks to the Gods above in the VIP lounge or planted on boxes of gear backstage, everyone was smothered in a sticky, relentless coating of thundering bass as Bassnectar closed the Red Bull Music Academy stage on Monday night. Unleashing his Whip-It brand bass lines (imagine those adolescent wah-wahs magnified by a million) and eclectic dub step to new wave mash up style and you’ve got a good reason why the majority of the independent vendors were shut down as the sun set and the more hair than flare DJ took to the stage — who would want to miss it? But Bassnectar’s set wasn’t without complication as Lorin Ashton, the California-based multi-instrumentalist behind the name, is quick to point out.

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Event Gallery I’m on a Boat!

May 28, 2009 - 9:15 am



Before the festival, there were the parties. And while there are great party towns, few can match Detroit’s. So when the official Paxahau “I’m on the Boat” party, held Sunday night, was announced shortly before the festival, it quickly became the “buzz” afterparty of the weekend.

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Event Movement: Why Detroit Matters

May 24, 2009 - 10:29 pm

Movement The Detroit Electronic Music Festival

In the beginning, there was only an unlikely pitch. What if Detroit, by 2000 already one of the most depressed, violent, financially challenged cities in the country, gave a free festival in Hart Plaza, the downtown river walk/concrete park, honoring techno music? What if Detroit were filled with people from all over the world on Memorial Day, having the time of their lives, raining serious coin on local merchants throughout the city?

Proving that truth is stranger than fiction, the city bought the idea. Thanks largely to a generous sponsorship package from Ford, which was introducing a new car, the Techno, DEMF (Detroit Electronic Music Festival) was green lit. And techno, which had been invented in Detroit, got its own festival — even though many of the people responsible for the decision had no idea what techno really was.

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Event Red Bull Big Tune: The Final Battle in NYC

May 21, 2009 - 10:19 am

BET and Red Bull have teamed up to give viewers front row and backstage access to the nations premiere music producer battle Red Bull Big Tune. During the 2008 U.S. championship clash, 16 producers from 8 cities battled head-to-head in front of a live audience in New York City to win respect, votes and ultimately to claim the title of Red Bull Big Tune Champion.

In this head-to-head competition, there will only be ONE producer left standing – the one with the big tune. You wont want to miss how it all unfolds. Special appearances by Alchemist, Digable Planets, DJ Premiere, Sha Money XL and Young Buck.

Tune in for the Finals,   May 21st at 7:30 P.M. ET/PT on BET

Event Got My Sci Fi On Thursday Night at Bordello Bar

May 19, 2009 - 9:17 am

Wig Out by Fever Dragon
Thursday night I walked into the doors of Bordello Bar and entered a world far beyond my own.  I could not fight back the “I have a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore” vibe as I stepped to the bar to order a vodka soda.  Soon enough, I was greeted by many friendly people wearing wigs, a man walked by on stilts in a glittery costume-his radiant smile accented in face paint, and a DJ started playing jams like: “Yummy yummy yummy I got love in my tummy and I feel like lovin’ you.”

“A bundle of happy, fabulous, magical, wonderful, sparkly people” was how host Jean Natalia labeled the crowd at last night’s Wig Out. Created in 2005 by Jean and inspired by a group of her performance artist friends, Wig Out is a monthly performance art wig cabaret home to the Bordello Bar in downtown Los Angeles.  Each month boasts a different theme, Thursday night it was: ‘Get Your Sci Fi On!’ Past themes have ranged from: ‘Get Your Evel Knieval On!’ to ‘Get Your Bubblegum On!’

Sci Fi Wig Out at Bordello

The evening entertainment kicked off with a performance by Orange County based electro/pop/punk band: Romak and the Space Pirates, whose dark and energetic tunes conquered any resistance to dance by those in the audience.  The band poked fun at the state of the CD industry by offering wearable USB flash bracelets containing their album for sale after the show.  Free downloads of the disc, in exchange for fan reviews, are available here.
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Art/Design Event Gallery Baby Tattoo Presents: Dr. Sketchy’s LA Re-Launch

May 14, 2009 - 9:03 pm

Art, boobs, booze! Do we have your attention? That’s the idea behind Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School. Founded in 2005 by fierce  New York artist Molly Crabapple, the cabaret life drawing phenomenon has spread across the globe, now boasting over eighty chapters in several continents, everywhere from China to France. For four years artists, burlesque performers, and drunks have joined forces under the Dr. Sketchy’s flag to dispel art scene pretense in the name of creativity and fun.

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