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Posts Tagged ‘Lipp’

Pretty Lights/Eliot Lipp | 04.15 | S.F.

By: Chris Clark

Pretty Lights/Eliot Lipp :: 04.15.10 :: Mezzanine :: San Francisco, CA

Pretty Lights :: 05.13.09 :: NYC by Maas

Maybe nowhere in music today is the buzz surrounding an artist humming louder than for Pretty Lights. Just two years ago, very few outside of Colorado’s burgeoning electronic scene had heard of the duo featuring producer extraordinaire Derek Vincent Smith and live drummer Cory Eberhard, and now Pretty Lights is one of the hottest commodities on the jam-tronica music scene. Pretty Lights has exploded onto the national music stage, performing to sold out crowds everywhere, and this looks to be only the beginning. Fresh off a sold out North American tour, the duo’s first trip over to the U.K. and Europe, sets at Coachella, Red Rocks and a barrage of other choice festival slots, Pretty Lights seems poised for only bigger and bigger things.

Making a quick stop at Mezzanine before their Coachella performance, Pretty Lights arrived at yet another sold out club. Before Smith and Eberhard would hit the stage, capable opener Eliot Lipp commenced the festivities, performing an hour set of his seductively slick slaw of breaks, hip hop and house – a concoction for both auditory pleasure and intelligent inquisition. Lipp’s masterful melange of 1970′s style funk and old school hip hop flavor combines two of the most head-bobbing sounds of the recent past and produces something futuristic. Brooklyn beats blossom into L.A. soundscapes, a tastefully transposed trendiness so smooth even the heaviest of feet began to move. As his set began to ascend from lukewarm to the boiling point, Lipp dropped into a remixed rendition of Rihanna’s “Rude Boy,” driving Mezzanine to a knee-buckling frenzy as his big bass coupled with Rihanna’s cry of “Come on, rude boy, boy/ Can you get it up?”

Where to begin with Pretty Lights? I’ve been to Mezzanine countless times over the last year and a half, and I have to say this Thursday night was exponentially louder and more enthusiastic than any show I can remember. Pretty Lights sold the show out well in advance, and it was announced last week that they would be headlining the famed Red Rocks Amphitheatre on August 7. So, feeling confident and pumped, this set was all fire. That’s the thing with Pretty Lights; they only have one tempo, full speed ahead. Whereas most DJs or bands perform sets with various peaks and valleys, starts and stops, Pretty Lights go from 0-60 in a few seconds and never look back. Performing a monster, close to three hour set, Smith and Eberhard blew the walls off the club with a fierce, pure, electro dance party.

Pretty Lights seems to have figured out their formula – a hard-driven, well-conceived concoction of high energy, easily accessible and seamlessly performed compositions that draw upon the best parts of groups like Daft Punk and Justice, combined with a live drummer for the jam fans to generate some the most well executed sonic explosions you’ll find. Songs like “Sunday School,” with its prime Biggie sample of “Fuck ‘em/ I didn’t want to go to heaven anyway,” and “Can’t Stop Me Now” highlighted a sweat-soaked set of hard, funky electro beats.

After more than 500,000 downloads of their albums and sold out shows coast to coast, Pretty Lights is blowing away all expectations. There wasn’t one dull song, one “bathroom break” moment. On this night, there were a thousand or so people dancing their asses off to one of the best party acts around. Pretty Lights has come a very long way in just two year’s time. Now the question arises, where do they go now?

Pretty Lights Tour Dates :: Pretty Lights News :: Pretty Lights Concert Reviews

JamBase | So Pretty
Go See Live Music!


New Earth Day Fest: 4/22-24 Cornmeal, Bridge, Lipp in Athens

THE NEW EARTH DAY FESTIVAL IS SCHEDULED FOR APRIL 22-24 IN ATHENS, GA

The New Earth Day Festival is scheduled for April 22, 23, 24 at New Earth Music Hall in downtown Athens, GA with 20+ musical acts.

3 day ($40) and single day ($15) passes on sale now at www.newearthmusichall.com

The festival features a diverse lineup of bands/DJs and will feature co-headliners Thursday and Friday night with
Pigs on the Wing (Pink
Floyd
Tribute supergroup) rounding out the festival with two sets Saturday night.

Eliot Lipp

The Lineup:

*THURSDAY, APRIL 22*
Midnite
Vieux Farka Toure
DJ Spooky
MURPH (of STS9)
The Bridge

Grogus

*FRIDAY, APRIL 23*
Toro Y Moi
Eliot Lipp
Dubconscious w/Axum

Immuzikation
Wonky Kong
D:RC
Cornmeal
Sumilan

*SATURDAY, APRIL 23*
Pigs on the Wing (2 SETS)

Party City
Kap10
Part Bear
Lewis B. (of LSDJ)

*Tickets also available at Schoolkids Records, 42 Degrees and Blue Girl Boutique in Downtown Athens


Bear Creek Adds: Maceo New Deal, PG, NMS, Lipp

Bear Creek Music and Art Festival Artist Additions

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival has announced the second round of artist additions to the 2010 lineup. Returning to The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida, November 12-14, the festival has added:

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

Maceo Parker Band

- The New Deal

- The New Mastersounds x 2

- Perpetual Groove x 2

- The Everyone Orchestra

- Elliot Lipp

- Alex B

- Brock Butler

- Josh Phillips Folk Festival

- Orgone

These artists join the previously announced talent:

- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2

- Lettuce x 2

- Soulive

- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2

- Papa Grows Funk

- Toubab Krewe x 2

- Zach Deputy x 2

- John Brown’s Body x 2

- Will Bernard

- DubConscious

- Garaj Mahal x 2

- Rebirth Brass Band

- Eric Krasno

- Adam Deitch and Break Science

- The Dead Kenny G’s

- Big Sam’s Funky Nation

- The Tony Hall Band

- Brian Stoltz

- Dr. Claw

- Sam Kininger Band

- Rubblebucket Orchestra

- The Macpodz x2

- Lubriphonic x2

- The Nigel Hall Band

- The Legendary JC’s

- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue

- Matt Grondin Band

- Snarky Puppy

- Cadillac Jones

- The Malah

- Green Hit

- Greenhouse Lounge

- Burnin Smyrnans

- Entropy

- Spiritual Rez

- Cope

- Diocious

Artists at Large

- Fred Wesley

- Skerik

- Mike Dillon

- The Shady Horns

- Kofi Burbridge

Early-bird tickets are $99 until February 17 when they will jump to $115. Early VIP tickets are $225 until February 17 when they jump to $250. Thursday night Pre-party tickets are $40. Tickets available at www.bearcreekmusicfestival.com.

For more on the Bear Creek Music Festival see our 2009 review here.


Bear Creek Adds: Maceo New Deal, PG, NMS, Lipp

Bear Creek Music and Art Festival Artist Additions

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival has announced the second round of artist additions to the 2010 lineup. Returning to The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida, November 12-14, the festival has added:

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

Maceo Parker Band

- The New Deal

- The New Mastersounds x 2

- Perpetual Groove x 2

- The Everyone Orchestra

- Elliot Lipp

- Alex B

- Brock Butler

- Josh Phillips Folk Festival

- Orgone

These artists join the previously announced talent:

- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2

- Lettuce x 2

- Soulive

- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2

- Papa Grows Funk

- Toubab Krewe x 2

- Zach Deputy x 2

- John Brown’s Body x 2

- Will Bernard

- DubConscious

- Garaj Mahal x 2

- Rebirth Brass Band

- Eric Krasno

- Adam Deitch and Break Science

- The Dead Kenny G’s

- Big Sam’s Funky Nation

- The Tony Hall Band

- Brian Stoltz

- Dr. Claw

- Sam Kininger Band

- Rubblebucket Orchestra

- The Macpodz x2

- Lubriphonic x2

- The Nigel Hall Band

- The Legendary JC’s

- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue

- Matt Grondin Band

- Snarky Puppy

- Cadillac Jones

- The Malah

- Green Hit

- Greenhouse Lounge

- Burnin Smyrnans

- Entropy

- Spiritual Rez

- Cope

- Diocious

Artists at Large

- Fred Wesley

- Skerik

- Mike Dillon

- The Shady Horns

- Kofi Burbridge

Early-bird tickets are $99 until February 17 when they will jump to $115. Early VIP tickets are $225 until February 17 when they jump to $250. Thursday night Pre-party tickets are $40. Tickets available at www.bearcreekmusicfestival.com.

For more on the Bear Creek Music Festival see our 2009 review here.


Dark Party | 12.01 | San Francisco

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Michael Mullady

Dark Party :: 12.01.09 :: Mighty :: San Francisco, CA

Dark Party :: 12.01 :: San Francisco

It’s been almost four years since Eliot Lipp released his debut LP, Tacoma Mockingbird, and already the producer extraordinaire has grown into one of the preeminent names on the electro circuit. Whether he’s performing with Lipp Service (which includes Alex B and Lane Shaw of Pnuma Trio), or more recently with Dark Party, Lipp has become one of the more interesting electronic musicians to track. His unique approach to producing – a blend of retro synth noises combined with rarely predictable hip hop beats – has helped propel Lipp towards an intelligent sound that’s well crafted and original.

Lipp’s love of ’70s era electronic music, along with his impressive work ethic, has recently led him to work with the highly underrated producer Leo123. This two-man collaboration has spawned something fresh, yet still similar to Lipp’s solo work, that combines erstwhile electronic grooves with futuristic and modern drumbeats. The paring of old and new has created a sound that somehow manages to be both sedentary and danceable at the same time. When listening to Dark Party, one can either nonchalantly intake the music with little physical movement, or get down and let the low-end beats move their bones. Either way, the music is enjoyable on many levels and almost impossible to categorize in any sort of strict electronic genre.

During the recent Dark Party layover in San Francisco at Mighty, Lipp and Leo123 brought their unique outlook on music composition to a discerning Bay Area crowd. Seeing that it was a Tuesday and that the evening’s biggest name (Eliot Lipp) was performing in a group that almost no one knows about (Dark Party), the people who showed up were somewhat connoisseurs of the electro scene. It was slightly unfortunate that there was not a larger audience, although, the lucky few that did stumble across the bill were not disappointed and the calibration of the two producers was an intimate experience, which might not have been possible if throngs of faux electronic music fans were there.

Dark Party :: 12.01 :: San Francisco

Seeing Dark Party perform was a treat, especially considering that the group hasn’t released an easily accessible collection of recordings. Watching the band live was a way to absorb the songs and listen to the nuances of the tracks, opposed to struggling to fully comprehend the possibilities from the group’s MySpace page. Lipp did polish off a few solo cuts, including the finely mastered “Calling Me” off his recent release Peace Love Weed 3D. Performing this aforementioned Lipp track was an opportunity for the duo to add a few extra layers to a song that Lipp would typically be playing by himself. The group also played their remix of the STS9 tune “Shock Doctrine,” pulled from Peaceblaster (The New Orleans Make It Right Remixes) album (JamBase review).

Many of the pieces Dark Party played during their set were organized in a fashion more akin to a classic rock song structure, as opposed to a typical electronic song progression. There were defined verse-chorus-verse-chorus shifts that helped add layers of originality to the music. These tonal changes were finely executed and helped keep the audience’s attention, despite the absence of any “real” instruments.

While it was hard to really know what the two producers were doing as they hunkered down behind their laptops, it was apparent that these two musicians were locked into the groove and intent on spreading their music to the masses. It’s hard to compare musicians playing laptops to musicians playing traditional instruments, but what Lipp and Leo123 were doing onstage was worthy of recognition. There lack of overall showmanship forced the crowd to almost ignore the two artists and wholly concentrate on the music.

Performing electronic music and making it visually engaging in front of a crowd is a quandary that both Lipp and Leo123 have no doubt grappled with, but instead of making a halfhearted attempt at producing some sort of stage spectacle, the pair was keen to just let the music speak for itself. Their performance was a no nonsense electro show without any sort of impressive pageantry. Yet, despite the lack of any real presentation, the music was extremely powerful and further cemented the upward career paths of Lipp and Leo123.

JamBase | Dark
Go See Live Music!