Tag Archive: "Drop the Lime"

Double Trouble: Trouble & Bass x Dutty Artz CMJ Showcase


Next Friday, October 21st, Trouble & Bass will team up with Dutty Artz for a CMJ Showcase at Public Assembly (70 N. 6th Street, Brooklyn). Trouble & Bass will take over the front room, and will feature sets from Drop the Lime, AC & Dell, The Captain, Deathface, Samo Sound Boy, Zombies For Money, and Udachi. Meanwhile, Dutty Artz will be tearing it up in the back with Toy Selectah, Mexicans with Guns, Gun Selectah, Atropolis, Matt Shadetek, and unannounced special guests.

Entrance is free with your CMJ badge; $10 without. We’re giving away a pair of tickets to show, just fill in the form below for your chance to win. You can double your chances of winning by sending THIS MESSAGE via Twitter. You must be following @hificartel, @troubleandbass, and @duttyartz to be eligible. Good luck!


Please do not click “Enter Contest” multiple times. You will receive a confirmation email when your entry is received.

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Posted in DJ, Events, Festivals, Local Flavor

Trouble & Bass’ 5 Year Celebration Shakes Webster Hall


Last Friday, Trouble & Bass celebrated their 5 year anniversary at Webster Hall with an insane party in the true style we’ve come to expect from the gang. Drop the Lime performed with his entire live band, putting on an extraordinary show to accompany his “raveabilly” sound. Plastician proceeded to drop some heavy bass, shaking the very foundations of Webster Hall with his gritty dubstep. And let’s not forget the rest of the Trouble & Bass crew, namely AC Slater, Star Eyes and The Captain, who each stepped behind the decks to drop some celebratory beats.

We’re looking forward to yet another year of Trouble & Bass glory, and can’t wait to see what they’ve got up their sleeves next. In the meantime…

CHECK OUT THE FULL PHOTO GALLERY HERE.

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Posted in Concerts, DJ, Live Music, Music News, Photo Gallery, Up & Coming

Contest: Win Tickets to the Trouble & Bass Fifth Anniversary at Webster Hall


As you must know by now, we’re super excited for the Trouble & Bass Fifth Anniversary Party. For the occasion, the Trouble & Bass Crew will take over Webster Hall on September 16, with a live performance by Drop the Lime and DJ sets by AC Slater, Star Eyes, The Captain and special guest Plastician.

As promised, we’re giving a way a pair of tickets to the event. There are two ways to enter: fill in the form below, and double your chances to win by sending THIS MESSAGE via Twitter. You must be following both @hificartel and @troubleandbass to be eligible. The contest will close on Monday, September 5 at midnight. Winners will be chosen at random and notified via email or direct message. Good luck!


Thanks for entering the contest! You will receive an email confirming your entry.

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Posted in Contest, DJ, Events, Local Flavor

Plastician Added to Trouble & Bass Anniversary Line-Up


This just in: Plastician will join Drop the Lime, AC Slater, Star Eyes and The Captain at Webster Hall on Friday, September 16 for the Trouble & Bass Fifth Anniversary blow-out.

In September, we’ll be giving away a pair of tickets to the show, BUT we highly recommend that you cop your advance tickets HERE – this will most definitely be a night to remember.

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Posted in DJ, Events, Local Flavor

Trouble & Bass to Celebrate Five Year Anniversary this September


When you hit the five-year mark, you either have to go big or go home. Trouble & Bass has opted to go big – make that massive – for their five-year anniversary party, which will be held on Friday, September 16 at Webster Hall. The night will feature all four members of the Trouble and Bass Crew – Drop the Lime, AC Slater, Star Eyes and The Captain, a live set from Drop the Lime, and a special guest that will be revealed closer to the date of the show.

We’re especially excited for this event, not just because we’re celebrating a milestone anniversary, but also because we haven’t seen the whole T&B crew together on stage since last Halloween. Waaaay too long, if you ask us.

To commemorate the occasion, the T&B crew went out and got a set of matching tattoos — check out the video by Matt Canada after the jump.

Advance tickets are $15 and available HERE. Be sure to check in with us in September for your chance to win a pair of tickets to the event.

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Posted in DJ, Events, Local Flavor

Photo Gallery: Drop The Lime Live at Music Hall of Williamsburg (May 11, 2011)


Drop The Lime performs live with a full band at Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn.

CLICK TO VIEW THE FULL GALLERY BY STEPHANIE KIMBERLY

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Posted in Concerts, Live Music, Local Flavor, Photo Gallery

Drop The Lime to Debut Live Show


Next Wednesday, May 11, Trouble & Bass favorite Drop The Lime will debut his full live show at Music Hall of Williamsburg. As anybody familiar with Drop The Lime knows, his musical talent and personal swagger pretty much guarantees that his live show will be something that is not to be missed. Opening for DTL will be New York locals Cubic Zirconia who will be performing live, as well as Trouble & Bass DJs.

Drop The Lime has been honing his craft for years. From humble beginnings as a choirboy to a childhood obsession with 50s rock’n’roll, the New York local has been experimenting with sound for years via the underground electronic scene of Kid 606’s TigerBeat6 label, Mad Decent and French label Institubes (under his alter ego “Curses!”). Drop The Lime’s influences range from Brian Eno to rockabilly (he’s well known for his 50s doo wop and soul sets) to Sonic Youth to Wu Tang but things don’t just stop there. He has been running Trouble & Bass since 2006, and anyone who’s been to one of their parties knows that this crew is made up of the DJs who are defining a new New York sound.

2009 was a big year for Drop the Lime. He released two huge club hits, “Devils Eyes” and “Set Me Free”, the combined force of which helped him topple the likes of Phoenix, Florence & The Machine and The XX as “Most Blogged Artist on the Planet” (Hype Machine). Luca took his unique style of DJing around the globe, farther afield than ever before, crisscrossing North America many times as well Europe, China, Singapore and Australia. Drop The Lime has continued his quest to be one of the world’s leading DJ/producers, with a slew of singles including the mind blowing “Sex Sax”, which tore up dance floors around the globe and was remixed ferociously by the likes of Sinden and Bart B More to much support. As a follow up to “Sex Sax” came ”Hot As Hell”, a track that takes it’s inspiration from the 1950’s rock’n’roll and the rockabilly sound Drop The Lime grew up on. A real original sound that he is making his own, the conjunction of Rockabilly and dance music is innovation personified. His full length album “Enter the Night” will be released September 12 and has already been hailed by Mixmag as “a hellraising, rockabilly road trip.

Get your advance tickets HERE.

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Posted in Concerts, DJ, Live Music, Music News

Musical Madness at SXSW 2011


To someone who has never attended SXSW, the annual music, film, and interactive conference that takes place in Austin, Texas, it is nearly impossible to describe. Unlike the traditional recipe for a festival, which includes centralized festival grounds and stages, clear borders, rules, and a line-up that is easily understandable, SXSW is a sprawling landscape of experience containing hundreds of overlapping events occurring all over the greater downtown area. Thousands upon thousands of eager attendees descend upon the warm and welcoming Texan city, turning the streets into the music geek’s ultimate playground. For nearly an entire week, at any given moment in time there are an overwhelming amount of showcases and parties, both official and unofficial, to choose between. Most of these events offer free food and drink, and all of them display some of the best up and coming talent that the music world has to offer in an informal and highly enjoyable setting. For those of us in the music industry, SXSW is also a prime opportunity to converse, dance, and drink with many of our peers, counterparts, and contacts from all over the United States. Artists, event organizers, media folk, PR people, tech people, and everyone in between are thrown together in one big jumble of what we love best – a huge music driven party.

While there were simply too many incredible showcases and parties to recount it all, there were undeniably certain artists who stood out from the rest, leaving a lasting impression in our minds (and cameras). On Thursday afternoon, Friendly Fires and Mount Kimbie both sent their soundwaves into the setting sun with outdoor sets at the All Saint’s IAMSOUND showcase at Shangri-La. UK band Friendly Fires performed first, getting the crowd moving under the trees with their fun and danceable sound made up of energetic indie rock set to a foundation of electronic beats. It was impossible not to move along with the highly energetic frontman and vocalist, as he and his band delivered old favorites like “Jump in the Pool” and “Skeleton Boy”. As the sun sank lower onto the horizon, so too did the sound emanating from the stage area, with Mount Kimbie stepping in with their more emotive and melodic electronic creations. Their sound dwelled just on the fringe of what might loosely be termed dubstep, overlain with beautiful ambient soundscapes and a heavy dose of heart.

Later that night, we stopped by the PureVolume House on a whim, as it was on our way to the next event we had planned to check out. We never made it to that event however, as we were immediately greeted upon entry with revolving lazers, open bar, a crowd that seemed to be having the absolute best time anyone has ever had, and Moby, arms raised above his head and a look of triumph upon his face; techno seemingly emitting from his very being. Despite a few blown-out speakers mid-set, Moby delivered a serious dose of the warehouse techno and acid house that has made him such a legend in the rave scene and beyond. Trouble & Bass member and New York City darling Drop The Lime took the stage afterward, taking his always outstanding performance to the next level by crooning live into an old fashioned microphone, and subsequently causing knees to go weak throughout the room.

The next evening was characterized by the experience of another electronic veteran, Sasha, who sent thundering progressive house into and around The Parrish, which had a line of hopeful fans winding far down overcrowded 6th Street. As with other electronic artists who played after sundown, Sasha seemed to revitalize the crowd, which was dusty, hot, and achingly tired after a full day of live music. There is something crucial about the evening-into-night time slot, as it represents a vital few hours where the attendees either expend their last shred of energy and collapse into exhaustion, or are propelled up a notch, catching a second wind and heading with renewed energy into the night. Sasha managed to evoke exactly the latter, with the audience at The Parrish seeming to grow only more awake as his set went on.

It was therefore with renewed strength that we embarked on the journey to Lustre Pearl Bar, arriving just in time for California based indie band Cold War Kids. They played a wide range of material to an enthusiastic crowd, including of course the ever popular “Hang Me Up To Dry” to the tune of hundreds of voices chiming in. It was thoroughly refreshing to experience a solid and straightforward indie band on a proper stage in front of a head-bobbing audience as they delivered the goods with just enough attitude and a marked lack of bullshit.

At this point, it’s no secret that we, and anyone else with a pair of ears and a heart, is a little (OK, maybe a lot) obsessed with British protege James Blake and his soulful, poignant communication through sound. His appearances (three to be exact) at SXSW were part of his first ever North American tour, this tour being the first time he ever even set foot on American soil. His performance at the French Legation Museum was truly something special, with the first inklings of sunset behind the stage providing something of a golden cocoon into which James poured his melancholy heart. A humble and nervous James dripped sweat as his fingers precisely manipulated his keyboard, and his heartbreaking voice echoed through the microphone and over the rapt audience. James and his band performed a large amount of material off his debut album, including his well known Feist cover “Limit to Your Love” and the tear inducing “Wilhems Scream”, which quieted the crowd, expelling all recollection of discomfort from the heat or aching feet.

Few shows at SXSW were as hyped up as that of Odd Future (OFWGKTA), who performed at the infamous Fader Fort by FIAT. In the past few months, Tyler the Creater and the rest of the Odd Future gang have been building quite a reputation for themselves in the music community, bridging gaps between hip-hop and punk, and performance art and sincerity. Odd Future has been gaining something of a cult following, which can be largely attributed to their highly anti-establishment persona and violently rebellious attitudes and messages. True to their art, Odd Future’s performance was filled with the highest level of intensity, as every wave of maniacal energy they hurled at the audience was returned in full fury, resulting in what can only be described as a small nuclear explosion of sound and force.

As SXSW began to draw to a close and thoughts of real life back in chilly New York City started to set in, we were lucky enough to be able to end this incredible week on arguably the highest point of the conference; Danish DJ, producer, and musician Trentemøller’s performance with a full live band at La Zona Rosa. We have long been patrons of Trentemøller’s musical brilliance, but it was truly a phenomenal experience to witness his live performance in Austin, which included a mixture of live instruments and vocalists combined with his electronic productions. It is a unique and fascinating turn in the history of music; this recent tendency of electronic producers to recreate their sound using live instruments. In this way, the computer becomes another instrument in a band, and rather than attempting to create the sound of an instrument using a computer, an instrument is used to create a sound that was originally programmed. Trentemøller and his band played incredible live versions of both old material such as “Moan” and new material including “Silver Surfer, Ghost Rider Go!!!”. Check out our interview with Trentemøller after his sound check at La Zona Rosa HERE.

While SXSW might be over, the experiences shared, music discovered, treasures found, and friendships built will carry us into the summer and beyond. We are already looking forward to what next year’s southwestern adventure will bring. Until then, we’ll have to satisfy ourselves with eating a big bowl of queso, drinking a cold Lone Star, and clicking through the photographs again and again and again…

CLICK HERE TO VIEW FULL PHOTO GALLERIES FROM SXSW 2011

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Posted in Concerts, DJ, Editorial, Festivals, Live Music, Music News, Photo Gallery

Video: Behind the Scenes w/ Trouble & Bass on Deathface’s “Bloodrave” Music Video Shoot


Last month, we tagged along with the Trouble & Bass crew on the music video shoot for “Bloodrave”, the lead single off Deathface’s new EP, Fall of Man, released today. On set, we caught up with Johnny Love (aka Deathface) and director Patrick Rood (aka The Captain), who gave us the scoop on the EP and on the music video concept, which is based on the opening scene of the movie Blade. The music video features appearances from members of the Trouble & Bass extended family… check out our behind the scenes video after the jump and see for yourself, and CLICK HERE to check out photos from the video shoot.

Fall of Man is available today on iTunes, Beatport, and a variety of other online outlets. CLICK HERE for a full list of outlets and to stream the EP via Soundcloud.

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Posted in HiFi Cartel, Interview, Local Flavor, New Music, Photo Gallery, Video

Last Chance to RSVP for the Trouble & Bass Lisbon Takeover


Tomorrow night, the Trouble & Bass crew will take over Santos Party House with a few special guests from Lisbon: J-Wow of Buraka Som Sistema and T&B’s own Zombies for Money. Preview some tunes HERE, and don’t forget to RSVP for $5 admission before midnight. All RSVPs will be entered to win a pair of tickets to the party. The guest list will close on Thursday at 5 PM.

CLICK HERE TO RSVP

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Posted in Contest, DJ, Events, Local Flavor

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