Lady Gaga & Elton John To Release “Hardcore Drum and Bass” Track

Lady Gaga released her sixth studio album, Chromatica, in May last year, bringing in a large assortment of dance music artists to produce or write on the tracks. And though Elton John isn’t a dance music artist by any means, the two seem to want to continue in that spirit with a rework of “Sine From Above,” their collaboration from the album.

According to sources, the new version will apparently “shock” fans.

“It’s about as far away from Rocket Man and Candle in the Wind as you can get,” the source disclosed. “It’s gone from a pop dance track to extreme hardcore drum and bass.”

The original song already features some EDM-esque breaks toward the end, as it was produced with help from Axwell, Burns, and LIOHN.

What this will end up sounding like when it comes out is anyone’s guess, especially when EDM terminology is used from technically “outside” parties. However, Lady Gaga’s history of being EDM-adjacent and Elton being from the UK leads us to believe they have some knowledge of the genre.

 

via The Sun

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Lady Gaga & Elton John To Release “Hardcore Drum and Bass” Track

Noisia Announce Final Show Ever at Printworks London [DETAILS]

Noisia have announced their final show ever at Printworks London.

After 20 years, the iconic drum & bass trio announced their imminent split in September 2019 and planned on a farewell tour for 2020, but that was all put on hold due to the pandemic. Noisia do have a number of dates on the books for 2021, with the Printworks show being the latest addition.

Noisia share via the post below:

Join us at @Printworks_LDN on the 10th of December for our final show ever in the UK capital. The UK and London have meant so much to us over the past two decades. This is going to be something very special!!

Just recently, Noisia unleashed their mind-melting production with Skrillex, josh pan, & Dylan Brady, “Supersonic (My Existence),” a silver lining as they inch closer to the end of an era.

Explore Noisia tour dates here and don’t miss their final shows!

Join us at @Printworks_LDN on the 10th of December for our final show ever in the UK capital. The UK and London have meant so much to us over the past two decades. This is going to be something very special!! pic.twitter.com/oTt9kz1hD2

— NOISIΛ (@Noisia_nl) August 10, 2021

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Noisia Announce Final Show Ever at Printworks London [DETAILS]

Adventure Club & Nurko Unleash Emotive Ballad “Color Blind” ft. Dayseeker [LISTEN]

Adventure Club serve up another anthemic ballad, “Color Blind” with Nurko featuring Dayseeker, leading into the release of their highly-anticipated sophomore album Love // Chaos.

Dayseeker’s Rory Rodriguez serenades with ignited passion as Adventure Club and Nurko’s emotional soundscape takes hold. Melodics swell and percussion resonates, complimenting the vocal fluctuations accordingly through the builds and releases. The result is a seamless, standout collab well worth repeating.

Adventure Club shares:

One of our favorite dream collaborations to date. We absolutely love everything Nurko has been releasing, pushing melodic bass boundaries. Dayseeker is currently one of our favorite bands, so we’re completely honored to have Rory contribute his incredible vocals.

So far in 2021, Adventure Club have unleashed “Safe With Me” with Soar featuring Luma, “Anywhere” with ARMNHMR and HALIENE, and “You’ll Never Be Alone” with Kaivon. Joining 2020 releases, “Already Know” with Said The Sky & Caly Bevier, “Rebellious” with Yuna, “Next Life” with Crankdat & Krewella, “Back to You” with Sara Diamond, and “High Like This” with Squired & DiaFrampton.

Listen to “Color Blind” here!

Adventure Club & Nurko – Color Blind (ft. Dayseeker)

Stream/download: https://ffm.to/col0rblind

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Adventure Club & Nurko Unleash Emotive Ballad “Color Blind” ft. Dayseeker [LISTEN]

Charlotte de Witte & Enrico Sangiuliano Drop Expert Remix of Dance Essential “The Age Of Love” [LISTEN]

Charlotte de Witte and Enrico Sangiuliano have come together to breathe new life into the largely influential, self-titled classic by Age Of Love. Out now on Belgian label Diki Records.

The iconic, trance-infused masterpiece “The Age of Love” is transformed into a driving techno roller, as Charlotte de Witte and Enrico Sangiuliano present their expert reimagination. Chill-inducing and spine-tingling as ever, the production shares a new perspective on the widely celebrated 90s dance staple, with no shortage of theatrics and gritty overtones.

The producers share a joint statement along with the release:

It’s a very meaningful track for both of us, for various reasons, and it brings back many joyful memories. Remixing such a legendary track was a super fun thing to do, but we noticed how easily and spontaneously we could work together in the studio. We are beyond excited to finally unleash our remix to the world. And this at a time where the world finally seems to be going back to normal. There is no better time for a New Age Of Love. We’re ready.

Come on, dance with me! Listen here and scroll down to see Charlotte de Witte and Enrico Sangiuliano throw down b2b just for the occasion.

The Age Of Love (Charlotte de Witte & Enrico Sangiuliano Remix)

Stream/download: https://fanlink.to/AOL2021

Charlotte de Witte B2B Enrico Sangiuliano (The Age Of Love Stream)

 

Photo via NIMAX Photography

 

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Charlotte de Witte & Enrico Sangiuliano Drop Expert Remix of Dance Essential “The Age Of Love” [LISTEN]

SLANDER & Subtronics Join Forces on Dynamic Dream Collab “Gravity” ft. JT Roach [LISTEN]

SLANDER and Subtronics have finally finished a collaboration together and it was well worth the wait — “Gravity” featuring JT Roach is out now!

This six-minute journey opens with a soft, delicate tone as JT Roach’s vocals take hold. SLANDER and Subtronics weave in gradual theatrics before snapping into a quick build and release. The first drop is crisp and assertive with optimal flow, signature of Subtronics’ heavy-hitting style. The second drop lends more to the SLANDER soundscape, with bright, ventilated trap synths to drive home the track’s emotion.

SLANDER share in their own words:

This song has been a long time coming! After working on a few different projects over a few years we finally finished something we are both so excited about, and that is Gravity! We love the intensity and emotion of this song so much. We have been big fans of Subtronics for a while now, and we knew we had to lock down a new tune for our b2b performance back in May. Also much love to JT Roach for the absolutely incredible vocal work! We hope you guys enjoy this one! PS: Make sure to go check out Jesse’s and JT’s other music as well, it’s amazing!

Subtronics echoes the excitement:

I cried when we finished this one and I’m not exaggerating. It felt special. “Gravity” was my first exploration into the music program, Kontakt, and I put serious effort into getting theatrical with the sounds. I spent days in disbelief at how well the orchestral parts came together and I still get bone-chilling rushes hearing them. The first drop makes me proud. Putting the “beep-boops” over the mid drop, then diving headfirst into melodics for the second, made this song feel like a new chapter of my life had opened. Producing and sound-designing is so meaningful and evolutionary to me – I learned I can do so much more than what I’ve been used to. Huge thanks to Slander for pushing me into a new dimension of sharing my art and emotions.

Listen here!

SLANDER x Subtronics – Gravity (ft. JT Roach)

Stream/download: gudvibrations.io/gravity

 

Photo by Joseph Gabay/@JG_Content_ via Subtronics (Twitter)

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: SLANDER & Subtronics Join Forces on Dynamic Dream Collab “Gravity” ft. JT Roach [LISTEN]

GRiZ Shares Inside Look at the Making of ‘Rainbow Brain The Movie’ [WATCH]

Transport into the universe of GRiZ and his new release Rainbow Brain with this mini-doc sharing an inside look at the visual expression behind Rainbow Brain The Movie.

The colorful, bright, beautiful and vibrant display that comes alive wouldn’t be possible without a vision and an entire team of creatives to make it possible. This behind-the-scenes snapshot recaps the five-day shoot into five minutes, offering a glimpse into Rainbow Brain from a different perspective.

MORE: GRiZ Drops Vibrant 7th Album & Talks All Things ‘Rainbow Brain’ [LISTEN + INTERVIEW]

GRiZ shares: “Take a deeper look behind the scenes of Rainbow Brain The Movie. This was a massive collective effort! Shouts out to all the people involved!”

Also, GRiZ recently announced his three-night GRiZMAS run in Detroit this December. More details and ticket info here.

Watch here!

GRiZ: Behind the Scenes of ‘Rainbow Brain The Movie’

GRiZ Presents: Rainbow Brain The Movie

 

GRiZ Press Photo by Jason Seigel 

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: GRiZ Shares Inside Look at the Making of ‘Rainbow Brain The Movie’ [WATCH]

Nero Announces Third Album Is Finished And On Its Way

It was 2010 when I saw Nero for the first time, at the original Audiotistic in San Bernardino. I walked into the structure where they were playing against Bassnectar and Kid Cudi on the main stage, so it was pretty empty. As I walked up to the large tower of subs at the front of the stage, they were playing their new song, at the time, “Me And You.”

Over the past eleven years, it’s a moment I’ve never forgotten and one that has led the UK trio to become my favorite EDM group. It took them four years following their game-changing debut, Welcome Reality, before they released Between II Worlds in 2015. But after that, it was uncertain whether the group would continue.

Though they continued to release the odd single, Dan and Alana split off to create a new duo, The Night, while Joe Ray began making more true-to-form, warehouse-style house singles.

Then, earlier this year, they released a surprise 5-run of old throwback edits on Audius. Now, they’ve come forward to announce the news we’ve all been waiting for — the third album is coming.

It’s no coincidence that the announcement was made on the 10 year anniversary of their seminal debut album, and we hopefully won’t have to wait that much longer for their next big project. Though there’s a good chance, likely better than good, that it comes out in 2022, we’re looking at the first half of the year if not sooner.

Stay tuned on this as we await imminent singles and more news about this exciting project.

Our first album, Welcome Reality was released 10 years ago today.

Our third is on the way… pic.twitter.com/ok9LkZ1xtW

— Nero (@NeroUK) August 12, 2021

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Nero Announces Third Album Is Finished And On Its Way

Feed Me’s Third Studio Album, Self-Titled “Feed Me,” Is His Best & Most Ambitious Work Yet

Jonathan Gooch has never been one to worry about the status quo. After transitioning from drum & bass as Spor, Gooch, or more commonly known as his present stage name, Feed Me, experienced blistering acclaim for his high energy mix of electro house and dubstep. When he released Feed Me’s Big Adventure in 2011, fans were immediately enamored by the little green alien who would be the mascot for the project as well as the innovative and engaging music he produced.

Fast forward ten years, and Feed Me has released another more album, five or so EPs, and countless singles among then-and-again appearances as Spor on lineups, and he’s not even close to done yet. In fact, his third and most recent album, out today, the self-titled Feed Me, is his most ambitious and best work to date.

Fans received the one and only single, “Reckless” with favorite collaborator Tasha Baxter, earlier this week before the album simply sprang upon us. And from the very first track, it’s clear that Feed Me has a story to tell.

“Big Kitten” begins with guttural bass, suspenseful synth and strings, and thunderous kicks. The first forty or so seconds are as in-your-face, here-it-comes, you-aren’t-ready-for-this as it gets, and it only gets better as an “Imperial March”-esque melody comes into play. Lightly modulated with added noise so that when the big drop comes, and you can feel in you bones that it will be big, it erupts into the real beginning of Feed Me with a, “Alright, check this.”

No doubt this will be the song that you show your friends in the car when they hand you the aux and say, “Play me something new.” But you’d be doing yourself a disservice if you stopped at just the first explosive song, or even just the first half of the first song.

“Blanket Ban” doubles down on this gritty Feed Me style that he does so well with a punk-goes-EDM energy that is absolutely electrifying. Distorted guitar licks fed through what can only be so many amps and effects pedals gives way to a pulsating beat that is underscored by a harrowing, noisy synth line and followed up by a tantalizing melody. The way that it continually builds upon itself until it collapses under its own weight and leads back to the original melody is textbook songwriting, but Feed Me does it in a way that feels so fresh and exciting that the basic becomes the extraordinary.

After that comes the one and only single, “Reckless,” and then the bewildering “Cost a Fiver Had a Tenner.” After the first three tracks, this one really comes out of nowhere with its off-kilter rhythm and heavy distortion. Even as it gets weirder and weirder, you can’t help but be mesmerized by the progression, like watching two people fight in a convenience store over the last Twinkie on the shelf, wondering what’s going to happen next. But as a detectable melody comes into play, the song begins to transform itself until it slows  to  an  absolute  drawl.

And then. The guitar. And the drums. And the slowly and ever increasing tempo. And it builds and builds and builds and builds until it breaks out into a ferocious breakdown that no one sees coming. And then it ends. And on to the next track we go.

Keep in mind we’re only at track four at this point, and the album has already run the gamut on Feed Me’s styles past and present, and probably future while we’re at it. One of the things that Feed Me does so well is in the way it subverts expectation but always stays close to a recognizable pattern. The songs begin one way and it’s somewhat predictable and you can tell how it’s going, and then he adds, whether it’s one little element or multiple, something else, some spice that mixes things up. A melody here, a synth effect there, a key change, whatever it is, he keeps the listener on their toes.

Another of the more peculiar songs on the album comes at track 8, “Frank Frazetta.” Who is Frank? Who cares. But it’s a housey, bouncy, electrifying track that feels like a portal back to Eptic’s 2014 The End EP and we’re absolutely here for it.

Having listened to Feed Me religiously since his debut in 2011, this self-titled album could not be a more perfect representation of his endless pursuit of the weird and wild. It twists and turns like the most cerebral of M. Night Shyamalan films, it diverts your attention and slaps you in the face like the most uncouth sideshow artist, and at times, it gets to the heart like the most poignant of stories.

Safe to say, wherever this album goes, we are happy to follow. Listen to Feed Me below.

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Feed Me’s Third Studio Album, Self-Titled “Feed Me,” Is His Best & Most Ambitious Work Yet

Your EDM Interview: Darkwave/IDM Artist She’s Excited! Talks Art, COVID and the ‘Shock Therapy’ that Got Her Through Lockdown

It’s not often that Your EDM highlights a new(er)artist with an interview, but with the level or creativity going on in musician, producer and art collective show runner Anne Wichmann’s world, it seemed warranted. It would seem Wichmann named her new project “She’s Excited!” because, well, she it. Brimming with exclamation points and ideas, Wichmann is deep in the audio/visual, VR and AR and alt electronica music worlds after having moved to Brooklyn.

With her new EP, Shock Therapy, her prominent XRE (Extended Reality Ensemble) collective spearheading VR and AR installations at multiple festivals around New York City this year and her ongoing musical collaborations, Richmann has enough energy and collaborative strength to bring the more indie forms of electronic music into the spotlight. The darkwave and IDM-laced Shock Therapy is heavy, futuristic and full of collaborations including both remixes and a “visual EP” on YouTube which also makes it an art installation. Inspired by the apocalyptic energy of the COVID lockdown in New York City in 2020, the EP is a snapshot of what Richmann can accomplish and, potentially, where IDM and augmented reality art are headed next.

Given the size of the waves Richmann, She’s Excited! and XRE have already been making, it seemed only logical that Your EDM hand over the reins to this one-woman multimedia experience (with some well-placed questions) to find out what inspires her, how she inspires others in the art and music world and what’s next for her, because it could very well also be what’s next in IDM and VR art as a whole. Buckle up and get excited!

How did you come up with the idea for this new EP, Shock Therapy?

She’s Excited! is a one-woman-show, and it is really nice to work alone, but I also truly love collaborating with other artists. I am so lucky to already have worked with amazing remixers for my past releases. On top of that, I have a passion for visual arts. In November 2020, I was so lucky that the artist collective that I co-founded called XRE (Extended Reality Ensemble) could co-curate the Creative Code Festival in New York. The main curators were Never Knows Better and Creative Code Art. They brought amazing visual pieces into Lightbox NYC, and that gave me the idea to extend my next EP from being an audio album to becoming an audio visual EP. I thought: Why not team up each music track – originals and remixes – with one visual artist and create a unique piece of art that way? This is how I got inspired to realize the concept of “Shock Therapy”.

In terms of influences, you’ve named David Bowie and Bjork but also Billie Eilish. There also seems to be a pretty strong Nina Hagen current running through your work. How do you think all these influences culminate in your own musical style?

Ooh, Nina Hagen! Nobody ever mentioned her when it comes to my music yet, I am honored! My biggest take-away from Björk is something she said in an interview once that for every new project, she goes deep inside and explores where she is at right now as a way to not simply repeat what she always did.

I think David Bowie did that, too but what mostly influences me when it comes to his music is his vocal styles and the songwriting. Bowie showed me as a kid that singing can be so many things. And it rocked my world to hear him express his emotions in his vocals so intensely. It did not even matter if I understood the lyrics or not.

And then of course I get inspired by sounds and breaks and builds of amazing musicians, songwriters, producers and singers. When writing and producing myself, I never intellectually think about those things, but of course they shine through.

Speaking to your own varied tastes, what sort of vibes are you trying to put out with this diverse palette of sounds in Shock Therapy?

I want to put out the positive energy that I am lucky to have, vibes that encourage growth and courage and strength. My psyche is not an easy one. Already as I child I suffered from depression which turned into huge anxiety attacks after my mother suddenly died. Music always helped me to handle that. Fear never limited me. I was never ready to settle for the darkness. Throughout the years with a lot of work and practice, I was able to get rid of these fears and panic attacks. The good news is If I can do this, everybody can! Fear and depression cannot be overcome by ignoring them.

My music is dark because darkness is a part of everyone’s life. Anxiety itself is not the problem. To be afraid of the fear and the darkness is the problem. In my music, I want to embrace the dark side, open up a portal to the bright side and through this process make space for the two opposites. They belong together. With my music I want to make space for healing and start a dialogue about difficult topics. Genre is not important when it comes to art. The intention is.

Speaking of feelings and mental health, you’ve said that Shock Therapy is an expression of emotions you felt during the 2020 lockdown in New York City. Do you think some of them were universal to what everyone was experiencing during lockdown or were there experiences specific to New York that may have been unique?

I think during that time – and still now – the whole world collective was confused and anxious. To a certain extent, the confusion is still going on. So yes, some of the emotions I felt during the NYC lockdown were and are pretty universal, but the situation here in New York was really extreme. The city was on the news not only in the US but in so many other countries, because it got hit so hard. So many people died, that they had to be buried temporarily in mass graves. We heard sirens passing by for 24/7, but all the other city noises were missing. New York, this absolutely crazy and buzzing city that never sleeps was silent. It was just the birds singing and the sirens howling. This felt like the apocalypse. It was really intense.

You’ve built a really strong visual component into this EP and you’ve tagged the YouTube videos as the “visual EP.” What did you want to convey with these visuals and how do you feel they reflect your style?

The only thing I did was to have a vision and follow it through. I teamed up the songs and remixes with visual artists. These decisions steered the work in a certain direction. When it comes to collaborating with other artists that I adore, I try to stay out of their process as much as I can. I usually have a lot of ideas, but in my experience you will get the best results if you give artists creative freedom.

Erin Wajufos decided to go for a “real music video” for “Add Clarity”. I totally love it. It reflects the vibe and the energy of the song in a very deep way and champions NYC as a protagonist. The other artists created mind blowing visuals. Intuitively they grasped the core of the music and visualized it in beautiful ways. You can hear and see the artists’ uniqueness in every  video. Despite the styles being different, we were able to create a beautiful concept album that really gels.

A unique feature of this EP is that you’ve featured the remixes along with the originals. How did that choice happen? How did you decide who to work with on each remix? Did you give them all carte blanche or was it more collaborative?

I love remixing myself, and I love hearing my songs remixed. It is such an exciting process! Very often remixes are not really recognized. To share the spotlight, I wanted them to be a part of the main release. I am a huge fan of all three remixers. Cameron Gary is a friend of mine, we have already worked together in the past, and I was really happy when he agreed to do a remix. I came across Trovarsi and Primitive Heart through the female:pressure network and had followed their work for a while. Last fall I summoned my courage and asked them if they would like to remix my tune and hey said yes! Since I was familiar with the work of all three artists, I gave them carte blanche. I love their skills and I wanted them to be able to use them in a free, playful and creative way.

Now the lockdown’s largely over, do you see Shock Therapy as more of a catharsis, or do you think it’s not over and it will continue to fuel your work?

Shock Therapy needed to happen. Music helps me to cope with things that I experience. It is not over in the sense that the pandemic is not over yet. And in the sense that I still enjoy playing the tracks live and I can share this music and these emotions with different people, they are still pretty real and valid. Additionally, I think the audio visual release is a beauty. It is timeless.

My next release will be quite different because I am different! The songs are lighter, a bit more colorful, and I am already in touch with some of the artists that I want to work with, which is a beautiful part of the creative process. All I can say at the moment is avatars will be in the mix!

Speak a little more about XRE collective, if you will. Can you elaborate on what you hope to achieve with it? Who’s involved and what types or projects are you all working on now? 

I co-founded XRE with my dear friend and colleague Clara Francesca, who is an amazing actress and poet. Right now we are spearheading the curation of the Ars Electronica Festival Garden NYC which will take place from September 8-12 in Culture Lab LIC in Queens. Ars Electronica is a very prestigious institution and we are stoked to work with them.

XRE has a bold vision of how to bring communities together in our new reality. Audiences became more separated by and during the pandemic. We want to bring these bubbles back together so we are working with artists with different cultural and social backgrounds. Audience accessibility is also very important to us. It is a big component of dismantling white supremacy in the age of COVID and racial injustice. To solve this problem, we’re bringing the audience as close as possible to our work, which, in turn, brings them closer to each other and themselves. If we, the creators, can be changed by our work, our audience can too. Together we can acknowledge the realities of life and the joy of diversity within it, rather than to ostracize one another for different perspectives. Thus, to really make the festival accessible, the entrance is free and people can donate if they can or want to.

Speaking of future work, is there anything you can talk about in terms of upcoming releases from She’s Excited!? Any more collabs with your remixers or artists in XRE?

With XRE we have a lot going on, as curators as well as artists. We just started to develop a new really big performance piece that will happen in both VR in live performance. We want to bring it to the Prague Quadrennial and to Japan.

For the Ars Electronica Festival Garden I teamed up with the amazing visual artist Ulisespal for our project “The Cube.” You will be able to see it online via streaming as well as in-person in NYC. It’s an audio reactive visual installation featuring two 15 minute music pieces that I created: soothing binaural beats layered with electronic music. The audience will be invited for 30 minutes every day to participate and send messages to the future audiences: I will record their voices, loop them, mix them and thus create a sound sculpture that will organically grow throughout the five days of the festival. The final version will then be featured on the XRE website.

And some wonderful gigs are coming up: I will perform as She’s Excited! online at the MONDO NYC Festival in October, and I will play in-person at the DIGITALANALOG Festival in my hometown Munich in the same month I have not been in Germany for more than two years, and I am really excited to go back, see friends and family and play such an amazing festival.

My next EP has the working title “Year Of Sonder” and will hopefully be released in March 2022. For the visuals I will team up with artists that are friends and/or members of XRE, one of them in Japan, so that’s really exciting! If everything goes according to my vision, I will also work with some amazing poets for this release.

Shock Therapy is out now and can be streamed on Spotify along with the rest of the She’s Excited! catalog, but do take 20 minutes and watch the visual EP on the project’s YouTube channel as well; it’s worth it.

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Your EDM Interview: Darkwave/IDM Artist She’s Excited! Talks Art, COVID and the ‘Shock Therapy’ that Got Her Through Lockdown

REPORT: “No Evidence” Lollapalooza was a Super-Spreader Event

While COVID-19 and its Delta variant continue to make headlines and loom uncertainty over the live events industry, there is reportedly “no evidence” to support Lollapalooza was a super-spreader.

The music festival took place in Chicago over July 29 – August 1, hosting approximately 385,000 people over four days. Most of attendees were vaccinated, according to city health commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady.

So far, there have been 203 cases of COVID-19 linked to the festival, with no hospitalizations or deaths.

“If we were more than 90% vaccinated as a city, as a country, we would probably be done with COVID,” Dr. Arwady said. “If folks are going to large events, please get vaccinated. It helps reduce risk for everybody.”

Leading up to the music festival, Lollapalooza and the City of Chicago incentivized attendees to get vaccinated by offering free passes at pop up locations.

More than 90% of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Chicago are due to the delta variant — read here.

 

Source: ABC 7 Chicago

This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: REPORT: “No Evidence” Lollapalooza was a Super-Spreader Event