|
MO SHIC & NICK SENTIENCE @ ROOM || 1st December 2006 || Pres by Earthcore & Room
|
View this Thread in Original format
| Anomyst |

EARTHCORE AFTERPARTY
Featuring MO SHIC & NICK SENTIENCE @ ROOM || 1st December 2006
Tickets $15 www.room680.com or www.earthcore.com.au for ticket sales
Full Lineup:
Main Room
Mo Shic
Nick Sentience (UK)
Mantrix (LIVE)
Ben Evans Vs Blinky (Live – Decks – Efx) (Interview)
Nevin (Frantic)
Virginia Le (Interview)
Side Room
Heath Myers
Simon Sleiker
Nago
Deviant
Walter Juan
+ More to Be Announced
Room680 and Earthcore have been partners in crime since the brand burst into the Victorian wilderness 10+ years ago, and it’s with great pleasure that they announce the return of tried and true main room madness for a night of astronomical proportions on Friday, December 1st, 2006
Joining this silly season party to end all silly season parties will be none other than UK hard dance legend, Nick Sentience, and Israeli underground progressive powerhouse, Mo Shic. Having worked for every major label in the known universe (including Positiva, Tidy Trax, EMI and Ministry of Sound) and torn the roofs off clubs and festival tents from Brazil to Botswana, Nick Sentience is without doubt one of the most talented, innovative, and revered DJ/Producers in the worldwide hard dance fraternity.
Speaking of revered, it’s a similar story for Mo Shic … Rising up from the underground in 2000, it didn’t take long for Mo Shic’s inimitable style of dark, twisting progressive to capture the ears and minds of legends like Danny Howells, Jimmy Van M, Jon Digweed, and Tiesto – indeed, his tracks have even graced some of their touchstone mix compilations. Aiming to export different kinds of productions, new sounds, and fresh vibes, Mo Shic is an innovator of prodigious proportions …
With Room’s intricate décor, Earthcore’s no bull reputation for parties that matter, and underground legends like Sentience and Mo Shic, needless to say this will be a bright night of dark twists and turns that’s simply not to be missed!
So, on Friday December 1st … choose Room … choose Sentience & Mo Shic … and choose the underground sound!
Check out.
www.interview.net.au
www.earthcore.com.au
www.room680.com |
|
|
| Anomyst |
| quote: | Originally posted by sezzy
nice going benny! |
thanks sezzy! we are going to be playing Tek!!! Tribal and deep!
I think this is Virginia's Main Room Debut..;) |
|
|
| sezzy |
| sweet! congrats to virginia also on her debut :) |
|
|
| BJeT |
| all the best ppl and congrats to Virginia :) |
|
|
| Virginia_L |
Thanks guys!
This will be such an awesome night.. MO SHIC rocks!!!!
Looking foward to seeing Ben Evans Vs Blinky (Live – Decks – Efx) !!!! |
|
|
| Anomyst |
we have some cheap tickets for $15 if your planning on coming along.
let me know |
|
|
| vman83 |
ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh awesome
CONGRATS virginia go girly :whip:
il see if i can come looks to be sweet... would love to show some support for vrgnia
wl she b plyng mniml ? |
|
|
| charlee |
People do not miss this. Moshic is ing awesome and he is so excited to be here.
Here is an interview I did with Blinky to get you in the mood
http://www.inthemix.com.au/features...linky_Beat_Geek
and Moshic
After breaking through in 2002 with the track "Nightstalker", Moshic has become Israel's most successful DJ export to date and a treasured progessive house DJ and producer.
This year Moshic is performing at Earthcore Global Carnival for the first time. He may even get some precious surfing time in while he's at it.
» You come from a family of talented musicians. Do you recall the first time that you experienced electronic music?
I don't really remember an exact point, but I have a memory of me sitting with my father in a cinema and watching the first "Star Wars" movie. The sounds and music made me shake and ask questions my father couldn't answer (hehe). I can say that I always had an attraction to electronic sounds since I was a little kid and was always recording music cassettes from the radio and wondering how humans could create those sounds.
» You certainly have an interesting past. How have the experiences of your life effected your music?
So much effect it's hard to describe. All my music is based on my past and present experience. Only when I started travelling the world and talking to fans I understood that my music brings something above sounds and speaks to people. They get messages I never directed to deliver and naturally it came out through my music. That made me realise that the experience I've come from was so extreme and non ordinary that this was the driving force behind my music.
» Not long after relocating to New York you moved back to Israel. What was it that brought you back home?
It was supposed to happen. I got connected with Mr Avi Yossef (my manager) after receiving my first record contract in NY. He heard my music through friends in Israel and contacted with me and saved me from a bad contract. My visa had almost expired anyway so I decided to go back. I felt like I was supposed to come back and move my underground creation back to Israel. Nothing can compete with the Israeli warmness and I really missed it when I moved. Together with that I'm sure that if I stayed in the US my underground spark would be replaced with money desire and commercial competition.
» "Nightstalker" shot you in to fame back in 2002 featuring as the opening track on Jimmy Van M's classic Bedrock mix. Were you expecting this to be your break out track?
In no way was that expected. It was so weird and such a personal breakout. I wish every producer in the world could experience that "naive" breakout and see their track signed to so many compilations when they were just sure they had only produced the track for their close friends and local crowd. I always try to imagine what would have happened if those times would have finished and moved directly to the mp3 world and left me behind like so many other talented producers who didn't make it and stayed anonymous, so what great timing in my career. It proved that to take a risk and not produce with compromise can be worth it.
» Since then your disocography has become a beast of its own boasting a staggering amount of releases. Tell us a few of your favourites.
Can you ask a mother which of her kids are her favorites? ;) Sometimes I play tracks I haven't for years and it makes me excited once again. It makes me think it's my favorite of all time, but really it's just in that moment.
» Your first studio album 'Salamat' was recently released and took almost two years to complete. Were there any productions difficulties or were you focused on taking your time with this project?
I didn't have production difficulties but rather I'm really a perfectionist when it comes to production and wanted it to come out as a complete creation and not just stand by the release schedule demand. I preferred to delay the album and make sure it was well produced and well chosen. I think that when my next album comes out, people will understand why "Salamat" took so long.
» Your many music commitments must keep you on your toes. What do you like to do when you have time to yourself?
I'm a true fanatic wave surfing and a sea lover. Also I'm kind of a chef and love to cook a lot!
» This will be your first visit to Australia and I hear you are a keen surfer. Planning to hit any waves while you are here?
Oh my god I've waited for this for so long and can't wait to see what so many people and friends keep talking about. The breaks you have here and the beaches are endless, it's gonna be like paradise for me.
» You will be playing at the Earthcore Global Carnival, one of Australia's most treasured outdoor alternative festivals. How do you feel about being in bushland for your debut Australian performance?
I think it's a privilege to put my music in the most natural place possible and I'm sure people will connect and isolate themselves with my sounds better outdoors (with a good sound system of course) than in an indoor club, with an expensive bar, fancy clothes and your valet parking outside. It's such a relief to play in the bush, the perfect decoration I could ask for my music.
As a believer in God and nature, I always try to use natural sounds in my production to bring people some tribal elements and get the natural roots back. So here I have a great opportunity to connect people with nature, which is God's creation (I hope I don't sound like a rabbi).
» Have you heard any Earthcore fables or stories?
Yes, my Israeli friends who have been there in the past, described it as one of the best parties they ever been to. I heard mud stories, love and sex stories, getting lost stories, but all with a perfect ending, so it's the perfect decoration and event for the electronic lovers as I understand, I can't wait!
You can catch the Israeli progressive master Mo-Shic live at Earthcore Global Carnival Victoria. |
|
|
| Teflon_Teapot |
| i cannot believe you are going to miss him liz:rolleyes: |
|
|
| charlee |
| quote: | Originally posted by Teflon_Teapot
i cannot believe you are going to miss him liz:rolleyes: |
Dude I am in Thailand!! But yeah I was almost going to drive to Earthcore just to see him but then I would get smashed!! and never come home.
He cant kidnap me now :eyespop: :eyespop: |
|
|
| Teflon_Teapot |
my god moshic was awesome, almost all of his set was new tunes on his upcoming album.
there was only a handfull of people dancing, but the music still rocked. bloody spiro and his choice of set times. |
|
|
|
|