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Re: The state of EDM in nightlife
| quote: | Originally posted by DJ Eddie Lee
Over the past decade, I've seen a massive change in the state of EDM and it's role in nightlife. Dance music has had a ton of ups and downs and through it all I've supported and loved it but lately, I have to admit I'm losing faith in it.
Dance music just doesn't appeal to the masses. That's why clubs are dropping it from their weekly rotations. And whether anyone cares to admit it or not, nightclubs are a business that need to make money here in NY to survive. That's why you hear hip hop everywhere you go, including clubs like Crobar, Spirit, Avalon, and yes even Pacha.
I recall a day where electronica acts like Prodigy, The Chemical Brothers, BT, Daft Punk, and Underworld pushed EDM and the dance music into the mainstream. People flocked to clubs to "experience" dance music through a huge sound system and even MTV picked up on it's appeal. But it seems those days have long passed and hip hop continues to pick up steam and has asserted itself as the dominant sound in clubs today.
I've seen this coming for a long time. My first residency in 1999 was at a small lounge in Boston playing deep soulful house to a packed room. By 2001 with business dwindling, the managers asked me to play a hip hop set, just to see if it would pick things up. In two months time my deep house lounge had turned into a full on hip hop dance club. It got so big that the promoters moved me into a much bigger venue and the place was still packed. It was to the point where I was playing 4 hip hop nights a week and my friday night gig, Embassy, which was attached to Avalon in Boston, made more money on some nights than Avalon! Needless to say, if anyone could see this coming, it was me. Eventually, I caught a break with the opening of Avalon in NYC, a new residency, and a renewed sense of hope that dance music was still going strong here in NY.
Whenever a new club opens up, there's generally a buzz around the venue for 1-2 years before something new opens up. What seems to have happened here in NYC was that there were 3 large EDM clubs (Spirt, Avalon, and Crobar) all opening within a short time and seriously competing with one another for a shrinking audience of EDM fans. It was only a matter of time before each venue had to try something new, including hip hop on their main floors. To me, there's nothing more depressing than hearing some annoying hip hop DJ giving "shout outs to all my ladies out there" over a huge club sound system. It makes me wanna vomit. But in my opinion, the state of NYC nightlife has hit rockbottom and it has me wondering if dance music will ever reign supreme in the clubs again.
It's a vicious cycle that dance music is in right now. In order for it to flourish, it has to be experienced over a huge sound system in order to attain it's full effect. Hearing "For an Angel" on the radio is nothing like walking into a club and experiencing it with a thunderous bassline. But with less and less clubs playing it, less and less people are experiencing it. It has lost so much of it's mainstream appeal and the younger generation that is so heavily influenced by the radio and MTV just aren't exposed to it. EDM is steadily losing it's fan base and it isn't being replenished by a younger generation.
Last week, I attended a small venue (that shall remain nameless) that was playing hip hop to very diverse crowd. There wasn't much dancing going on so the DJ decided to become a bit more adventurous and decided to drop a few well known EDM tracks. Bad idea. People were looking at him as if he just shot a puppy. This is the state EDM is in right now.....
I've got so much more to say on this matter but I'll spare you. If you're read this far, I thank and applaud you. |
Its sad
Someone finally post a good thread only a few take the time to read it.
Oh and for those who could care less about eddies comments
Go back to your pointless threads and have a nice day 
Last edited by pyro264jb on Sep-02-2006 at 17:40
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