|
I found some spots with lots of space for dancing, and good ventilation...
but I couldn't see Tiesto, the crowd (except for the mob right outside the booth, trying to either get in, or get something signed), the lights, or the videos from there
If I remember correctly, Tiesto didn't play much new stuff, i.e. that most of us (or at least I myself) haven't heard yet or too often.
He sure did get the place going when he played Love Comes Again. I thought his set was lacking flow in the first hour, but it did get better afterwards.
Also, props to Eddie Lee, the resident DJ who opened and closed. Too bad he's not on TA (yet, AFAIK). His sets are always quality, but he played on another level on this night. Amazing how much the crowd responded to his sets. When he ended at 6:45 am, there was enormous applause from the floor. One person told him that he played better than Tiesto. Remember his name because you'll be screaming it all night. 
Why did the club still have the hip-hop room? With the event being ticket-only, with the kind of prices there were, were hip-hop heads really still going to go? How many of the people who came for Tiesto had any interest in hearing hip-hop in the course of the night? I think it would've been better if it had the music linked from the main floor, for the crowds to spill into.
___________________
Cities clubbed in:
North America: NYC, Miami, Boston, LA, San Francisco, Chicago, DC,
Baltimore, Atlanta, Philly, Toronto, Montreal, San Juan, Columbus, Seattle,
Vancouver, New Orleans, Minneapolis, Las Vegas
Rest of world: Ibiza, London, Amsterdam, Berlin, Singapore, Seoul, Tokyo, Taipei,
Zagreb, Bangkok, Rio de Janeiro
Last edited by partyhopper on Jun-13-2004 at 17:20
|