Cover Story
Massive attack
From Dj Psycho to Major Lazer, here are the 12 acts you need to see
Published: May 23, 2012
Set: Wobble-wobble-whut-whut-womp-wizardy
When: Sunday, 2 - 3 p.m., Underground stage
More: on.fb.me/MsEZsr
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Cover Story
Published: May 23, 2012
Set: Wobble-wobble-whut-whut-womp-wizardy
When: Sunday, 2 - 3 p.m., Underground stage
More: on.fb.me/MsEZsr
Who: Malik Alston
From: Detroit
Sound: Alston's been the hardest-working man in Detroit's house music business for years, as seen in his steady calendar of live performances and in such signature tracks as "On My Way" and "Badeya (Pirahnahead's remix)," as well such classics as "Can You Fill Me," "Tour Detroit" and new remix of "Close to You." The veteran singer, keyboardist, DJ and producer preaches an instantly vibe-able brand of deep jazz and spiritual house channeling Kenny Dixon Jr. and Mike Huckaby for a sound as much about Sunday morning as Saturday night.
Set: Alston will be playing live keys and singing accompanied by Howard Wazeerud-Din II on trumpet, Keith Berber on percussion and Badriyyah Wazeerud-Din on vocals debuting tracks from his new album, Future, culminating with an all-DJ set of classics. Double-whammy — whoa.
When: Sunday, 4-5:30 p.m., Made in Detroit stage
More: facebook.com/malikalston
Who: Nic Fanciulli
From: West Malling, Kent, UK
Sound: For the last five years, Fanciulli and his Saved label have released consistently intelligent techno-savvy house gems as progressive as they are crowd-pleasing — from such artists as Philip Bader and Emerson Todd — while remixing and collaborating with everyone from Radio Slave to Detroit's own Stacey Pullen. In short, a man for all reasons, all of them good: dancing, minus the cheese.
Set: Fanciulli is currently touring with Joris Voorn (the pair play Movement's evil twin Electric Daisy Carnival in Vegas next month) to support his new double-disc mix, "Balance 021," so expect a set steeped in the melodic-but-not-cheesy UK house tradition that keeps spirits lifted as much as arms, full of the kind of rich bass and crispy percussion goodness you'd expect from dance music that has evolved into a sonic recipe.
When: Monday, 8-10 p.m., Beatport Stage, back-to-back with Joris Voorn
More: nicfanciulli.com, facebook.com/nicfanciulli
Who: Major Lazer
From: Florida, Philly, UK, Jamaica,
Sound: Originally conceived sort of as a joke by superproducers Diplo and Switch (M.I.A.), the idea of two honky knob-twiddlers making a straight-up, yardier-than-thou dancehall reggae record actually turned into one of 2010's best records, Guns Don't Kill People ... Lazers Do, and has since become a kind of rolling circus of bass-daggering-dancehall for the party-kid set. That said, the new single from this "group," a somber R&B reggae track featuring pasty chanteuse Amber Coffman of Dirty Projectors, belies a deeper, less cartoonish side of Major Lazer. Or at least a lighters-in-the-air ballad.
Set: DJ Switch's departure from the group has left Diplo to rely even more heavily on a traveling band of collaborators. Live, the group recalls a Jamaican sound system at its best and most hyperbolic: a stream of hypemen and emcees offering patois outbursts in between seismic farts of bass and airhorns. In other words, pure chaos. Enjoy.
When: Monday, 11 p.m.-midnight, RBMA stage
More: majorlazer.com
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