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When David Sinopoli answers the phone, heâs at his Miami nightclub Jolene, rolling joints.
Sinopoli, along with member of his staff, are prepping roughly 1,000 joints as part of the gift bags artists will be getting at III Points, the festival Sinopoli co-founded in 2013, which launches its 2023 edition on Friday (Oct. 20) at Miamiâs Mana Wynwood center and its adjacent blocks. Other goodie bag items include crystals and magic mushrooms. (But not too many, as in past years, a few artists got so high that they had trouble getting onstage.)
âItâs become [a tradition] where we can all get together, eat some food, everyone plays music,â Sinopoli says of this annual rolling session. âItâs really nice, fun and quite wholesome.â
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Itâs also one of the personal touches that have made III Points a standout on the U.S. electronic festival circuit over the last decade, while also elevating Miami one of the crown jewels cities in the countryâs electronic scene. Itâs founders grew up in Miami, and the lineup is 60% local acts â Coffintexts, Jonny From Space, Nick LeĂłn â along with 2023 headliners including Skrillex, Fred again.., Iggy Pop, Caroline Polacheck, Grimes and Black Coffee. The food vendors and visual artists are also all from the city, as are many of the 50,000 people who attend over its two days.
âI think itâs just very authentically Miami, and a real time capsule of Miami sonically and visually right now,â Sinopoli says of putting on a festival with an identify and real personality. âI think people feel that when they come.â
III Points is able to rep the city so well because Sinopoli and his team â âtheyâre connected here 365â â know it so intimately. Sinopoli is also the co-owner of Space, the cityâs 24-hour bacchanal of a nightclub that he, along with Davide Danese and Coloma Kaboomsky, took over in 2016. Heâs also the owner and operator of Factory Town, a 190,000-square foot arts and nightlife complex built in a World War II-era mattress factory, as well as the cocktail bar Floyd and Jolene, the intimate âsound roomâ where Sinopoli and his some staff are rolling Js.
David Sinopoli
Giano Currie
Born in New Jersey, Sinopoli relocated to Fort Myers with his family when he was 15. He was diagnosed with cancer while in high school, once spending five months in isolation at a Durham Childrenâs Hospital. A bone marrow transplant from his brother eventually brought him back to good health, and after he finished high school, Sinopoli went to college in Gainesville. He rose through that cityâs nightlife scene then making a name for himself in South Florida, where he founded III Points in 2013 with his business partner Erica Freshman. Their statement-making debut lineup featured James Murphy, Jamie xx and DJ Shadow, a crew that was 180 degrees away from the big-name EDM DJs dominating the cityâs club scene in that era.
Carving out a place for underground and indie-leaning electronic music, and getting acts to town that might otherwise never play there, âis part of the reason I started III Points,â Sinopoli says.
Routing a tour to Miami has long been financially challenging for artists, with many acts just skipping the city altogether. âTo play Miami and be supported by Orlando and Tampa on the way down almost doesnât make sense [for artists],â Sinopoli says. âA lot of time Orlando and Tampa donât support the same things Miami does. Miami is in Florida, but itâs not fâking Florida.â
III Points has also been embraced within the industry for booking new acts agents are excited about, but who donât often yet have major name recognition. Sinopoli says while such signings âmaybe are not making the most sense financially,â they payoff is in fresh lineups, industry goodwill and the opportunity to break artists and grow along with them.
As the festival has expanded Sinopoli says many agents now just block off the weekend in advance then look for an offer from III Points. This is easier given the fest happens in the fall, the opposite side of the year from Miamiâs other major electronic music festival, Ultra. While thereâs some lineup overlap, each largely does its own thing, with Ultra driving loads of business at Space, Factory Town and Floyd each March.
Business was also shored up when III Points partnered with electronic festival behemoth Insomniac Events in 2019. The company took an ownership stake in Space and became partners in all of Sinopoliâs business ventures. âThey sat with us for a long time before they stepped in in some of the areas we really needed them,â he says. âThey let us make mistakes first, before they were like, âWe can help you with that.’â
âIâm not even 40 yet,â he continues, âso Iâm learning so much by mistake, and sometimes you canât afford to keep making mistakes, because it will put you out of business.â
Insomniac has been especially helpful in training him and his team in marketing and budget management. âWe would think we made money or only lost that much money,â he says, âthen the real report would come out and itâd be like, a swift kick in the stomach. They helped us understand that you start with this budget, then every 30 days you cut it down, then cut it down again.â
The partnership was especially stabilizing in the pandemic and its aftermath. In 2020, III Points moved its dates four times: âIt was [Insomniacâs] backing that allowed us to do it,â Sinopoli says. âIf it was up to us, we would have cashed in and walked away.â
Adina Yev
The peace of mind of solvency allows for a focus on music and experiences. When assembling lineups, the team first considers who hasnât been to Miami in awhile, and whoâs never been at all. Sinopoli also dreams up the moments and vibes heâd like to create, then plugs in the artists mostly likely to conjure them. This worked especially well in 2017, when The xx played the mainstage with a glowing light on the festivalâs giant disco ball (âthe largest disco ball on the southeast!â) that gently twinkled on the side of the warehouse wall.
âIt almost looked like raindrops, then all sudden this cold drizzle of rain started coming down on the crowd.â Sinopoli looked next to him and saw his production manager was crying. âBecause it wasnât something we could have planned,â he says. âIt was like this fâking God moment.â
This weekend will, fingers crossed, deliver other such magic. III Pointsâ six stages will host the aforementioned headliners, along with Explosions In The Sky, Bone Thugs N Harmony, Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, Alice Glass, SBTRKT, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Moscoman & Whitesquare and many other stars and up and comers culled from both around the world and around the block.
Sinopoli laughs when asked if he feels like he runs the cityâs electronic scene. âNo! No, no,â he insists, listing a dozen names of people on his staff that help make it all possible. Heâs been having a lot of big-picture conversations about the festivalâs ten-year anniversary, but his days are more about details, like lights on the disco ball and joints rolled with love.
âWeâre so deep in the bubble that I donât really even grab on to any outside significance of it,â he says. âItâs really just about the next show.â
SebastiĂĄn Yatra, Chencho Corleone, Vico C, RBD, Carin LeĂłn, Maria Becerra, Young Miko and Eladio CarriĂłn were among the more than 50 Latin music stars that took center stage in Miami for the 2023 edition of Billboard Latin Music Week (Oct. 2-6). Some of the biggest names in Latin music made their way to Miami […]
With studios in New York, Los Angeles, Nashville and Washington D.C., SiriusXM can now also call Miami âhome.â The audio entertainment company has officially opened their âstate-of-the-artâ broadcast complex that will operate in South Beach. SiriusXM is also set to launch a new Latin pop channel, Hits Uno, on Friday (May 5) which will become the stationâs 17th Spanish-language channel.
âIâve been with the company 15 years and when they told me that we were opening a state-of-the-art in Miami, in the hub of Latin music, I got so excited,â says Bryant Pino, director of Latin music programming at SiriusXM, who hosted artists such as CNCO and Zion & Lennox during a soft launch of the studios in March. âAs a company, weâre doing things that really matter and are important, especially with whatâs going on with Latin music right now.â
Latin music revenues in the United States hit an all-time high in 2022, exceeding the $1 billion mark on the wings of 24% growth that outpaced the overall market. According to the RIAAâs year-end Latin music report for 2022, total revenue jumped from $881 million in 2021 to $1.1 billion, with Latin musicâs overall share of the total music market lifting from 5.9% in 2021 to 6.9%.
Opening studios in Miami and launching a new Latin channel is an acknowledgment of the cultureâs growth, says Azu Olvera, SiriusXMâs senior director of Latin talent and industry relations.
âWeâre not thinking of Latin as a backseat but as a driver of success and engagement. And when were coming up with the concept for the new channel, we wanted put together all these hits in one single channel that reflects the genreâs diversity.â
During the days leading up to Hits Uno, SiriusXM will host special live shows, including an intimate performance by Carlos Vives, an interview with Pitbull and a Becky G town hall-style conversation.
âWith Hits Uno, weâll be able to represent todayâs Latin music fan,â adds Pino. âBack in the day you were a rockera, or reggaetonero but not both. Now, itâs cool to be eclectic, to listen to everything. Weâre not a local radio station, this is not a Miami station but rather a nationwide platform so weâre going to be exposing people to global hits across all genres.â
The Howard Stern Show is airing live from the new Miami studios on Monday, May 1 through Wednesday, May 3. Stern, who has been working from home in recent years, will be joined live in the studio by special music and celebrity guests.
âMiami is an incredibly rich center for music and entertainment,â Scott Greenstein, SiriusXMâs resident and chief content officer, said in a statement. âSiriusXM Miami will capture the cityâs unique culture and character and bring it to audiences across North America. Weâre thrilled to have Howard kick things off in the biggest way with three exceptional days of shows, followed by a star-studded lineup of programming that showcases the broad array of content we offer, including the diverse and vibrant music emanating from the Latinx community.â
All aboard, baby. Groove Cruise announced the lineup for its January 2024 voyage from Miami to The Bahamas on Wednesday (April 12).
Billboard can exclusively announce that Diplo, TiĂŤsto and John Summit captain the lineup, with a strong crew of artists including Disco Lines, Gabriel & Dresden, Joel Corry, LP Giobbi, So Tuff So Cute, VNSSA rounding out the bill.
Additionally, the party will feature hosted stages by brands including LP Giobbiâs Femme House, Diploâs Higher Ground and Summitâs Off The Grid. The boat will also host artist hosted games and activities like blackjack, bingo, volunteer opportunities, mentorship sessions and mental health workshops.
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The festival is largely sold out, although a few premium packages remain. The event will take place on the Norwegian Encore. Able to host 4,000 guests, this is the biggest ship Groove Cruise has employed to date.
The festival at sea departs from Miami on January 24, sailing to The Bahamas for a beach part on Great Stirrup Cay and returning to U.S shores on January 28. The event, produced by Whet Travel, marks the Groove Cruiseâs 20th anniversary.
âI canât believe itâs been 20 years,â Groove Cruise founder Jason Beukema tells Billboard. âWhen I first had the idea of Groove Cruise as a 25-year-old kid from Michigan with no money, not a single DJ contact, and not knowing anyone in the cruise industry, I never thought that two decades later I would be booking international superstars like TiĂŤsto on a near billion dollar cruise ship.â
âOur first sailing,â he continues, âwas a 125 person cruise in 2004, and itâs been incredible to witness lifelong friendships flourish out of that initial cruise and to hear how it changed peopleâs lives. Itâs been humbling to watch the community and experience it evolve into the world class event it is today.â
While Groove Cruise helped innovate the festival cruise model two decades ago, theyâve since become a hugely popular format for live music consumption. In the dance world, HARD has hosted Holy Ship since 2021, while earlier this year Insomniac Events announced the maiden voyage of their EDSea cruise happening in November.
See the full lineup below
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Mariah Angeliq caught up with Billboard News to discuss the criticisms that inspired her latest single âRicota,â running away from home to pursue music and how she thrives as a woman in reggaeton.
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âI [grew up] listening to music because of my mom. She has a love for music and named me Mariah because Mariah Carey was her favorite artist,â she explains. âWhen I was like 9, I realized yeah, I wanna be on the screen. That could be me.âÂ
The Miami native has seen much success in a short time, including her breakout single âPerreito,â which she performed at Billboardâs 2022 Latin Music Week and later with the chart-topping âEL MAKINONâ alongside Colombian star Karol G.Â
Mariah recalled meeting producer Nely âEl Arma Secretaâ at age 16 and was motivated by the Luny Tunes hitmaker to begin singing in Spanish. âFor all my teenage years, I was singing in English and thinking to myself that I was going to be like the next fire R&B American artist,â she tells Billboard.Â
Around that time, Mariah ran away from home to fully immerse herself in the pursuit of music, something she says her family didnât take seriously early on. Despite the lack of enthusiasm from her loved ones, she pressed forward. âWe always know as artists that weâre going to make it,â she says. âI always believed in myself, and in my music.âÂ
Her most recent single, âRicota,â came in response to Internet âhatersâ hurling insults at the 23-year-old singer regarding her weight. âThey started saying I was fat and Iâm not here looking for validation. I think what thatâs what the message of the song is,â Mariah explains. âSociety has such a distorted perspective of beauty. But while I was getting all those negative comments, I received a DM saying that I was âbien ricota,â so I got inspired.â
When it comes to navigating reggaeton, which for most of its history has been male-dominated, she draws on inspirations like Ivy Queen and her own âbossâ energy. âI feel like Iâve navigated or learned to navigate through it really well because of my attitude and my strong character. You just gotta learn to speak up for yourself and have a voice.âÂ
Mariah will embark on a European tour this summer, and possibly a U.S. tour to follow.
Each year during the penultimate week of March, the city of Miami is inundated with superstar DJs, up-and-coming producers, fans and electronic music industry insiders â all of whom flock from around the globe to have a little fun and seek their fortune at Miami Music Week.
As is annual tradition, from Tuesday to Sunday â or in the case of Club Space, which hosts a 48-hour closing party, the following Tuesday â every venue, warehouse, hotel lobby, art gallery and alley that can fit a pair of turntables is transformed into a party; the piece de resistance being Ultra Music Festival, the three-day mega-fest that takes over downtownâs Bayfront Park the weekend following MMW.
But other than throwing parties, booking every hotel room within a 20-mile radius and getting roughly five hours of sleep a night, what is everyone actually doing? What, exactly, is Miami Music Week actually for?
This business-laced bacchanal got its start in 1986 when dance music fans Louis Possenti and Bill Kelly organized the first Winter Music Conference. What started in a Fort Lauderdale Marriott over the years expanded to host an estimated 100,000 people in its golden age in the â90s. The conference lured a whoâs who of DJs, record label executives and everyone in between to Floridaâs tropical beaches to talk shop, swap records, test the latest gear and share a cocktail or 20.
WMC also hosted informative panels alongside a lineup of official pool parties, demo submission opportunities for up-and-coming artists and capped this celebration with the International Dance Music Awards.Â
Soon, satellite parties not officially associated with WMC popped up around the city, taking advantage of the wealth of talent flying in. The first Ultra Music Festival came to life on South Beach in 1999, and by 2011 had grown from one day to three, becoming one of the largest and most successful dance music festivals not only in the United States, but the world. In 2011, when WMC decided to move to early March while Ultra kept itâs later in the month dates (effectively forcing the industry at large to choose one of the other week), the MMW brand was born to give a name to the week of parties leading up to the festival.
In 2018, Ultra bought WMC outright, putting on small iterations of the Conference in 2018 and 2019. After the pandemic, however, thereâs been no conference at all. (Its official website has been updated for 2024, suggesting a return next year.)
Still, hundreds of thousands of electronic music makers, lovers and executives keep returning for MMW. But how important for business is Miami Music Week? Or is it just a party? In an industry that parties for business, does it accomplish both goals?
View From Spinnins Sessions Miami Music Week 2023
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âIâve been going to Miami for more than 10 years already, and I almost never went to the conference,â says Jorn Heringa, Head of A&R at Spinnin Records. This year, he and VP of Marketing Susanne Hazendonk flew to Miami from Spinninâs Dutch HQ to take advantage of what they see as one of the most important business opportunities of the dance calendar year.
âYou have a little drink together and it makes our chats a bit easier,â Hazendonk laughs. âBut I wouldnât say itâs just partying. Itâs definitely also business â otherwise we wouldnât be allowed to fly over.â
âItâs great for us to be here, because normally you donât see a lot of American artists and managers,â Heringa continues. âAmsterdam Dance Event is just the overall business, and I think Miami is more DJ-minded â thereâs a lot of DJs and managers around.â
With so many of Spinninâs DJs and producers in one picturesque locale, the label books tons of talent for its Spinnin Sessions Pool Party and asks these artists to take part in press runs and on-site shoots, filming content that can be shared on social media for months to come.Â
âWe also try to launch a couple of really important club tracks, so DJs can test the waters,â Heringa says. âIf it feels good, they hopefully will play it in their sets at Ultra or one of the bigger pool parties â because itâs the starting point of the summer, and if it works over there, they will play it the whole season.â
Ultra proudly proclaims itself as one of the most globally attended festivals in the electronic world. Heringa and Hazendonk liken its global impact with that of Tomorrowland in Europe. Add to that the Ultra livestream broadcast, viewed by millions, and youâve got a recipe for serious exposure.
âThat has a lot of impact on our current marketing strategies,â Hazendonk says, âso it moves the needle for sure.â
You donât have to be a record label or artist playing Ultra to feel the impact. Brownies & Lemonade is an event production brand that started in Los Angeles and now hosts a variety of concepts across the country. After hosting a stage takeover at Ultra and its first MMW event in 2018, B&L considers MMW pivotal.
âMiami Music Week is one of the few events where, no matter how big or small you are, you can have some sort of involvement,â says co-founder Kush Fernando. âItâs a week long and stretches all around Miami from small to big events, as well as Ultra. If youâre into dance music in some capacity, you should definitely try to take advantage and do something.â
For Fernando and his team, MMW has become a spotlight and launch pad for whatever the B&L brand sees as its most important activations. âOur drumânâbass parties [DnBnL] are a big initiative for us, so we really wanted to have the presence of that at Miami Music Week,â he continues. Fernando says that in the past, B&Lâs Miami events made enough to cover their expenses, although this yearâs sold-out events turned a profit.
Madeon Plays Brownie & Lemonadeâs Miami Music Week 2023 Show.
Acre Media
Standing on the side of the stage at B&Lâs Thursday night party, the impact MMW can have on an artist could be seen first-hand. Madeon was delivering a massive DJ set, complete with his hyper-saturated Good Faith Forever visuals. A group of industry insiders gathered in VIP to watch, including up-and-coming producers ISOxo and Moore Kismet, both of whom were scheduled to play Ultra in the coming days.
When Madeon started mixing into ISOxoâs single âBeam,â the friends looked at each other, jaws on the floor. They started jumping up and down, and then Madeon turned and waved ISOxo to join him on stage. You could tell it was a moment the 22-year-old would never forget.
âWhen I first experienced Miami Music week, I was a college student in Miami working as a waitress,â remembers Stefania Aronin, known now to fans as DJ and producer Nala, with releases on Dirtybird, Pets Recordings and her own label Mi Domina. âIt was the first time I realized I could pursue a career in music and be part of the arts and entertainment world. By the time I left the infamous Hard to Leave Sunday party at 7:00 a.m., I decided to quit my waitressing job two hours later and throw myself into the music events industry 100 percent.â
Aronin lived in Miami at the time, and though she now lives in LA, she returns each year to take advantage of booking and networking opportunities.
âWhile partying is still a big part of the week, Iâm at a different point in my career where the goal is to discuss track releases, tour dates, and collab opportunities with old and new colleagues,â she says. âItâs about sending unreleased tracks to friends and playing parties that showcase your art direction. This past week, I spent a lot of time reconnecting with artists, promoters, agents and label managers from cities across the world. Itâs a mix of a reunion and a reminder that weâre all pushing full speed ahead in our careers.â
âMiami Music Week is definitely a highlight of my year,â says Brandon Kessler, co-founder of Miami-based management company Super Music Group, whose roster includes Grammy-nominated artists Amtrac and Durate and Major Lazer member Ape Drums. âBeing from Miami, itâs amazing for everyone in our industry and the artists we manage to be together in our city playing shows and networking. This year was my 15th MMW, and every year it reminds me of the growth weâve made during the previous year.â
Kesslerâs client Amtrac used MMW as a platform to launch a new party concept called Go Time!, going back-to-back with his friend Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, a show Kessler says âhad the nostalgia of an OG MMW event.â While Kessler declined to comment on the profitability of these shows, he calls them âa labor of love.âÂ
Ian Oâ Connor
So too was the panel that LP Giobbi and her Femme House non-profit organized at the W South Beach on March 24.
âDuring a week that is chaotic to say the least, it was important to me to take a beat to set intentions on what we are all doing out in Miami in the first place,â LP Giobbi says. âHearing all the panelists and my co-founder, Lauren Spalding, speak about allyship and equity gave me the fuel I needed to power through that week.â
This panel, Allyship and Amplification: Creating Equity in Dance Music invited representatives of Spotify, UTA, Diploâs Higher Ground label and more (including the author of this piece) to discuss the current state of the industryâs diversity initiatives. It was well-attended, demonstrating that thereâs still a demand for informative panels during this party marathon. One of the young women in the audience told me days later on Instagram that it was the highlight of her MMW.Â
âIf we just go into the city, throw a party and then leave, it kind of seems like weâre missing the point,â says Bryan Linares, Label Manager at Steve Aokiâs Dim Mak. Heâs worked with the company for more than 15 years and has been coming to Miami for 14.Â
âWhat weâre trying to do is figure out how we make this more of an interactive experience,â he says. âHow do we create more of a community with fans, but also with up-and-coming artists?â
Toward that end, Dim Mak set up a demo submission opportunity for emerging artists to have their songs heard by label heads, who in turn gave them instant feedback. Itâs something Dim Mak started at last yearâs ADE and hopes to continue in cities across the U.S.
Speaking of upcoming talent, there is one segment of MMW that still feels under-represented no matter where you go: Miami itself.
âThe scene is kind of getting run over â like, trampled,â says Miami event producer Justin Lobo. âItâs all become super-commercialized, and thereâs not really a place for locals to have the spotlight shined on them. Club Space kind of does that for some of our locals, but theyâre basically a huge conglomerate. At the end of the day, the majority of people that come here are tourists, and we live here. We should be able to get a piece of that.â
Rather than sit and complain, Lobo and his buddies put on a massive house party some 20 minutes west of the main MMW hub. Happening on March 25 (the second night of Ultra), the cheekily titled Miami Aâ Party fit a few hundred locals into two downstairs rooms and a backyard, transformed with club-quality sound systems, lighting tech and some of the highest-tier DJ and live music talent I heard all week â all of whom are born or based in Miami and south Florida.Â
Anastasiya Verbytskaya
Cars lined every edge of grassy lawns for a roughly five-block radius, while inside, the kitchen was completely covered in silver wrapping; disco grooves bounced off the refrigerator and through the ears of sweaty dancers. Another room was set up with a folding table where DJs played straight-up electro records in the dark for hours on end. Every time someone accidentally hit a light switch, the room of kids would shout until someone turned them back off.Â
There were full bars set up in each room, and a merch table with Miami Aâ Party t-shirts in the backyard. Here, I heard a live band play everything from â80s new wave covers to country music before having my mind totally blown by the improvisational grooves of three-piece band Eris. Lobo says he lost money on the party, but, âFor the sake of the party and the community, I said, âFâk it.’â
It was particularly insane that all this was going on in a two-story residence, while just a quick drive away, essentially every major electronic artist in the world was playing. The party went until 9 a.m. the next morning, until one of the neighbors finally called the cops.
âI think that thereâs a possibility we might bring this thing to the [94th Aero] Squadron,â Lobo says, referencing one of Miamiâs large and off-the-beaten path venues near the airport. âThatâs a big dream of mine. You put a thousand people in there that donât know any of these fâing localsâwell, guess what? After that party? Youâre going to know who they are.â
By its very name, âundergroundâ music should be something you have to âdigâ for. You have to seek it out, stray a bit from the beaten path and try something that feels a little risky. In this way, it seems diametrically opposed to the âmainstream,â which is very easy to find because it sits at the top of the charts, gets played on the radio (often ad nauseum), and requires little to no research to learn about.
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The class war between âmainstreamâ and âundergroundâ dance music fans has existed for over a decade, since EDM roared into mainstream consciousness and many âseriousâ heads looked on aghast. This era cemented the idea that those who âdo their researchâ have a one-up on the âuneducatedâ masses, because underground folk have earned some kind of status by way of taking ownership of their playlists, and mainstream music lovers just take what theyâre given.
In the greater conversation of todayâs U.S. electronic music industry, the âundergroundâ is usually defined as house and deep house, techno and tech house; while the âmainstreamâ consists of EDM bangers, dance-pop crossover hits and maybe, sometimes, bass-heavy American dubstep.
But after attending Ultra Music Festival 2023 this past weekend (March 24-26) in Miamiâs Bayfront Park, and scoping the lineups of large parties at the surrounding Miami Music Week, the so-called âundergroundâ sound has clearly become as popular, if not more so, than its chart-topping counterpart.
So what are we even talking about now when we talk about underground music and the culture surrounding it?
Indeed, how âundergroundâ is a back-to-back set from house/techno heroes Maceo Plex and Michael Bibi when it draws roughly 10,000 people into a covered stage the size of a small airplane hangar, just a five-minute walk from where Zedd is bringing out the trendiest up-and-coming rapper in the world? (Ice Spiceâs cameo on the Ultra mainstage during Zeddâs Saturday night set even inspired hate from EDM fans on the Internet, despite her massive popularity and the fact that her 2021 hit âNo Clarityâ directly samples one of the star producerâs biggest hits.)
Thereâs a narrative that lives within dance music; this idea that one is lured to the rave scene by some big EDM pop hit and attends a couple festivals with their friends, mostly hanging around the mainstage to hear familiar favorites. A couple years down the line, if they keep going to dance festivals, they start exploring the side stages and get exposed to house and techno. Soon they trade their daisy bra for a black T-shirt and sunglasses, and now theyâve âevolvedâ into a âserious dance music fan.â
This narrative is bolstered by many within the industry, whether itâs a promoter trying to book more European acts Stateside or a blogger on Twitter reminding everyone that âwe all started at the mainstage,â and surely it fits some peopleâs actual lived experience. But it also reeks of oversimplification into neat demographics that can be exploited for profit. Surely we all realize that in reality, people are more nuanced than âbass broâ or âblack T-shirt techno.â
There are lots of other people who were turned on to dance music by some other means of exploration, and some people skip the dance-pop train entirely. On the way home from Ultra on Sunday night, a friend of mine rattled off intimate life details about Italian house and techno DJ Joseph Capriati, but had never even heard the name Illenium, and only the latter artist has a Hot 100 tune.
Where does my friend fit in the grand scheme? In fact, right there Ultra Music Festival alongside the Marshmello stans, standing a few feet away from the guy in a Deorro jersey jamminâ out to a tech-house set from Mind Against. Maybe all of our tastes are a little different, but weâre all dancing in the same field.
Yes, thereâs something sexy about being part of the âunderground.â Itâs got a sense of exclusivity, like youâre special for being there, even if tech-house has become the sceneâs prevailing genre â one that was nearly unavoidable over the weekend regardless of what stage one was at. The âundergroundâs exotic allure is the backbone of Ultraâs âResistanceâ concept. The brand debuted at the festival in 2015, the same year Major Lazer and DJ Snake released their record-setting âLean Onâ and Martin Garrix collaborated with Usher, two feats that represented the peak of EDMâs U.S. radio saturation.
With a lineup this past weekend boasting sets from Tale of Us, Sasha, Jamie Jones and The Martinez Brothers, the idea seemed to be that house and techno DJs were somehow âresistingâ the urge to do mainstream pop things, and that those who flocked to the stage were in the cool corner doing something really interesting. Itâs not that they werenât, but itâs hard to argue that anything happening on this massive stage, in front of its massive crowds, was somehow more exclusive than anything else going down in Bayfront Park over the weekend.
Maybe thereâs not a huge overlap between the people who want to see Art Department and people who want to see Armin Van Buuren, but ultimately, both those categories of people will spend hundreds of dollars on a ticket, along with airfare, hotels and other amenities during one of the most expensive weeks in Miami tourism. Both acts are really popular. Otherwise, Ultra wouldnât book them.
Not only are the Resistance stages popular, theyâre also highly favored by the overall Ultra brand. Case in point, Ultraâs Resistance residency at newly opened South Beach mega-club M2. It follows in the footsteps of Ultraâs existing and highly lauded Resistance residency in Ibiza, and it debuted this week with performances by house and techno stars Carl Cox, Sasha and John Digweed, Solardo, Anfisa Letyago, Charlotte De Witte and other mainstays of the Resistance brand.
De Witte, the Belgian DJ-producer known for hard-edged dark techno, also made her debut on Ultraâs mainstage on Friday evening. The set was positioned like some kind of coup, with Ultra presenter Damian Pinto asking the audience to show de Witte the same amount of love they would for any of the other more familiar main stage acts, as if this incredibly talented and well-known international DJ accidentally ended up on the festivalâs biggest stage without anyone having have ever heard of her.Â
Was it the first time a âseriousâ techno DJ played the Ultra main stage? Maybe, but Deadmau5 has played here, and heâs no stranger to the genre. Hardwellâs big comeback set last year was pretty dark and banginâ, both emphasizing and capitalizing on how popular the style has become for audiences worldwide. To act like de Witteâs performance was some kind of wild upset seems a little disingenuous, and a bit patronizing to audiences overall.
Dance world classism is so entrenched, itâs begun to affect the artists themselves. A producer friend who wasnât playing Ultra this year but who came to the festival to hang and support her peers talked about the disappearance of âmiddle class DJsâ â a phenomenon not dissimilar to the current economic crisis thatâs diminished the strength of a true American middle class.Â
According to her, some artists feel they have to choose between high-paying, seemingly âmainstreamâ gigs like Ultra, EDC Vegas and the like, or walk a âmore honorableâ path playing âculturally-richâ spaces for much lower fees. Itâs a decision thatâs become increasingly difficult as corporate interests take control of the scene, and one that suggests the amount of money artists make or number of people they play in front of somehow defines the quality of their art. But itâs dangerous thinking, both in terms of how it might limit creativity, and in the sense of the welfare of artists whoâd shirk financial gain for fear of losing credibility.
The Megastructure at Ultra Music Festival 2023
Alive Coverage
Ultimately, this weekâs Ultra and Miami Music Week proved that âundergroundâ house and techno is really popular in the United States â just like many scenesters critical of EDM during the boom days hoped it someday would be. If you needed more proof, consider the 5,000-capacity mini festivals thrown at Miami venue Factory Town every night last week, including the sold-out Afterlife showcase featuring Tale of Us, Camelphat and Mathame, who then played to massive crowds at Ultraâs Resistance Megastructure four days later.
But at the end of the day, if one really loves music, âpopularâ shouldnât be a dirty word. Tastes change and evolve over time, on micro and macro scales, but itâs slippery to suggest that the type of music one likes says anything about oneâs value or intelligence as a human. (Case in point is M83, who played Ultra back in 2012 and who recently faced backlash from DJs on Twitter for saying he regrets any crossover EDM fame, due to his distaste for the fans that scene brought him.)
This past weekend, it was cool when Kayzoâs live guitarist stood on a cage while fire spit from every corner of the Ultra live stage. It was really cool when a giant, 3-D lineup of exterminators shot cryo over the crowd at Eric Prydzâ stunning Holo show in the Megastructure. It was dope that Swedish House Mafia played Fred Again.. tracks between the trioâs classic hits as they closed out the main stage on Sunday and it was fun when Kaskade and deadmau5 bantered back and forth like besties while spinning on giant, glowing cubes. It was sick when TiĂŤsto dropped drumânâbass out of nowhere, and it was neat to hear Carl Cox create a live remix of Daft Punkâs âDa Funkâ on the fly.
As genres continue melting into one another, âundergroundâ music draws massive crowds, and the mainstage gets increasingly experimental, itâs hard to argue that many (or any) true ârulesâ to dance music remain. But â from the mainstage to the Resistance stage to all the places where mainstream and underground overlapped and to musical moments beyond â much of what went down at Ultra 2023 made people dance. Certainly, that remains the best test of whatâs good.
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Source: AFRO NATION / AFRO NATION
The biggest Afrobeats celebration is coming to the United States. Following successful festivals in Africa, Europe, and the Caribbean, Afro Nation takes the next step with Afro Nation Miami 2023.
Source: AFRO NATION / AFRO NATION
The inaugural Miami festival promises performances from ascendant Nigerian superstars Rema and Asake, dancehall legend Beenie Man, rising African stars CKay, BNXN, and Black Sherif, French rapper Franglish, and many others. Shining a special spotlight on the ascendant genre of amapiano, born in South Africa, Afro Nation Miami brings the Piano People stage, headlined by Major League DJZ and Uncle Waffles, and featuring many more of the genreâs most exciting names.
The festival follows up a groundbreaking 2022 from Afro Nation, which has established itself as a major tastemaker and advocate for African music since its founding in 2019. Afro Nation brought a high-powered group of international music stars and over 40,000 fans to the beaches of PortimĂĄo in July for the second-ever Afro Nation Portugal, with headliners that included WizKid, Burna Boy, and Megan Thee Stallion. Earlier in the year, the innovative festival made its North American debut with Afro Nation Puerto Rico. The festival closed out 2022 with Afro Nation Ghana 2022 in Accra, Afro Nationâs first event in Ghana since 2019.
Afro Nation festivals are dedicated to providing a global platform for music from Africa and its diaspora. In addition, Afro Nation teams with BBC Radio 1xtra and the Official Charts Company to host a weekly UK Afrobeats Chart Show, and in 2022, Afro Nation partnered with Billboard to present the first-ever U.S. Afrobeats Chart. With more milestones to cross and many unforgettable sets in the near future, Afro Nation is primed to shine an even brighter spotlight on some of the most exciting artists in music today.
Source: Ernest Ankomah / Getty
You can visit https://usa.afronation.com/Â to buy tickets and view full information about the festival.
Afro Nation, the worldâs biggest music festival focused on Afrobeats music, is coming to the continental U.S. for the first time this year. Afrobeats giants Burna Boy and Wizkid will headline its latest two-day festival in Miami in May.
Following the success of its 2022 Afro Nation festivals in Portugal, Puerto Rico and Ghana, the inaugural Afro Nation Miami 2023 will unite the African and Caribbean diaspora at LoanDepot Park on May 27 and 28, 2023.
The upcoming festival will celebrate and highlight the best in Afrobeats, reggae, dancehall, hip-hop, amapiano, soca and other Black-led musical genres. The first wave of performers who have been announced include Rema, Asake, Beenie Man, CKay, BNXN (formerly known as Buju), Dadju, Franglish, Black Sherif, Nelson Freitas, Gyakie and Nissi. Major League DJz and Uncle Waffles will headline the Piano People stage.
Tickets will go on sale starting, Friday at 1 p.m. ET at USA.AfroNation.com. Register at the site to gain access to the special presale.
In March of last year, 40,000 people attended Afro Nation Puerto Rico 2022, its first festival in North America that was headlined by Wizkid and Megan Thee Stallion. In that same month, Afro Nation partnered with Billboard to create the first-ever U.S. chart for Afrobeats music. The U.S. Afrobeats Songs chart ranks the 50 most popular Afrobeats songs in the country based on a weighted formula incorporating official streams on both subscription and ad-supported tiers of leading audio and video music services, plus download sales from top music retailers. Afro Nation recently produced its Ghana-based festival in December.
Afro Nation Portugal 2023 is also set to take place in PortimĂŁo from June 28-30, and its lineup has yet to be announced.
See the Afro Nation Miami 2023 lineup below.
Courtesy Photo
Written By D.L. Chandler , Senior Editor Posted 7 mins ago @dlchandler123 D.L. Chandler is a veteran of the Washington D.C. metro writing scene, working as a journalist, reporter, and culture critic. Initially freelancing at iOne Digital in 2010, he officially joined the iOne team in 2017 where he currently works as a Senior Editor […]
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