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SEAL OF APPROVAL (DC) – Dave Nada & Hip Hop Dan present WHAT’S THE SCENARIO – 9:30 Club – 7/17/10

16 Jul

Let’s not get things twisted. Dave Nada started off in the DJ game as a certified face smasher. His Krunk parties with DJ Tittsworth were thinly veiled threats against the stability of one’s mind when assaulted with the hardest and toughest edges of hip hop. Even further, let’s go back to his days as an undergrad at the University of Maryland, hanging out in the college radio station learning how to do this from current Neptunes touring DJ Hip Hop Dan. On Saturday night, you’ll get to see both of the now veteran spinners turn back the hands of time to their youthful days of exuberance as spinners. Yes, now Dave is not as much as a face smasher as a total DJ, someone as adept at making your pour with sweat or become one with a groove, or, when at his best, doing both at the exact same time. Dan is a certified winner, keeping things eclectic and using a set as a backdrop for truly finding the connections that allow for disparate sounds from different genres to be unified as music.

Dance parties at the 9:30 Club are ridiculous. Last summer’s Blisspop Summer Extravaganza was unbelievable. I’ve seen Deadmau5 there, and it was quite the scene. However, my favorite dance parties are when Will Eastman and Brian Billion do their No Scrubs 90s party at the venue, and it’s literally 1000 crazies going nuts. This summer, the venue’s already had Black Cat 80s night stalwart DJ Lil’E last Friday night doing a Madonna v. M.I.A. v. Lady Gaga night that was quite amazing. This one, well, I say multiply those vibes times ten.

If you want to hear the building blocks of what we know today as the underground, come out to the 9:30 Club and set yourself free. Dave Nada and Hip Hop Dan are easily two local names with international importance to much of the way the underground today both listens to and appreciates music. From humble roots sprout the trees of legend. This night will be special. From the root to the fruit, and back again.

Maybe Dan and Dave aren’t on the level of importance quite yet as the four fellow University of Maryland alums shown above. But the emotions you’ll feel when they use their talents and drop tracks like the one shown in the video below, an d you could possibly change your tune.

Go Terps.

Cmonwealth’s TOP BILLIN’ takes hip hop to the U Street Music Hall’s Temple of Boom with AMAZING results…

26 Mar

Hip hop music made it’s initial foray into U Street Music Hall on Thursday evening as east coast clothing giant Cmonwealth sponsored one of their “Top Billin” events featuring the Missile Command duo of one-half of the Neptunes Chad Hugo, and Bmore’s own and Neptunes tour DJ Hip Hop Dan. Dan is one of the more notable historic DJs to the local underground dance scene, as during his time as an undergrad at the University of Maryland, his otherworldly talents and unique ear for blending disparate musical styles influences individuals like fellow Maryland student at the time Dave Nada to take their DJing craft much more seriously and pursue it further and deeper. It was quite apropos to have sets spun by Dan in the inaugural period of a hall that likely, on many levels wouldn’t exist without his historical influence.

Hip Hop Dan (via http://www.lifelounge.com)

However, the best laid plans often go awry, as was the case last night, as Chad Hugo missed his flight from Miami due to the extenuating circumstances of working with Pharrell on the upcoming Neptunes release. For the average event, this would be a terrible occurrence, but for this particular party, there was a forgotten ace up the sleeves of the event coordinators that turned the night into the most ridiculous event held in the venue’s brief history. Hip Hop Dan opened with a set that, as per usual, recalled DJ AM, as Dan’s seamless, all-star ability to blend top 40 cuts across genres was on display, Maroon 5 and Justin Timberlake seamlessly falling into Young Jeezy, the Clipse (more on them later) and the Neptunes, a cross cultural jaunt that for a VERY hip hop minded audience was the perfect opening set for what was to come.

Yep, that’s Harry Hotter with the Pied Piper of R & B, Robert Sylvester Kelly

Whether you know him as Harry Dixon or Harry Hotter, Harry Hotter is one of the finest DJs on the East coast. The only reason you’re likely unaware of him is that as soon as the underground became a raging maelstrom of party energy, Hotter disappeared from the scene for four years. He re-emerged as a top 40 and grown and sexy cut spinning bottle service club DJ instead of the ravey underground house and rap spinner he was before. His skills and talents on DC’s downtown scene has earned him favor amongst people like R. Kelly and The Clipse. Coincidentally the Newport News trap rappers’ Play Cloths line is sold at Cmonwealth, and due to Cmonwealth’s origin being intrinsically linked with the Star Trak family, it was quite the no brainer that when Hugo was unable to make the party, that Hotter get the call.

What separates Harry Hotter from pretty much every other DJ I know is his mental library of music and his ability to blend that with a note perfect ability to read a crowd. Yes, U Street Music Hall would appear to be the most indie of indie music venues, but Harry turned the Temple of Boom into Park at 14th for the night, throwing down a scintillating mix of mainstream classics including such little known jams as Frighty and Colonel Mite’s “Life is What You Make It,” a reggae toast that I’m fairly sure was a hit nowhere else but DC, where in the spring and summer of 1990, it was completely unavoidable, to club tracks like Cajmere’s “Percoloator” and DJ Class’ “I’m the Shit.” Weaving through Jagged Edge and the Wu Tang Clan and turning the peak hour of the party into a sweaty funk massacre of heaving bodies, Hotter, who spins Saturday night’s Bliss party U Hall debut did what he always does, hearkening back to the summer of 2009’s loft partties thrown by the AV Lifestyle Group, throw down the mix most appropriate to turn that crowd from a sea of Blackberry and murmuring conversation obsessed individuals into a crowd of partiers, Hotter being one of the cities chief ambassadors of a good time.

The clarity and depth of sound at the U Hall, which has been the all star for most of the sets spun at the venue so far, took a backseat last night to maestro selectors who, with the aid of a most excellent soundsystem can play unfettered, and to the utmost of their abilities. Noting that Sam “The Man” Burns, Jess Jubilee, Nick Catchdubs, DJ Ayres and the Trouble and Bass Crew, alongside the rising party smashers of Nouveau Riche are forthcoming to the venue only portents the sweatiest of sweaty nights to come. Yes, the U Hall is hot. Oppressively hot. Sure there’s air conditioning, but you can’t feel it. The star, above ALL else at the Temple of Boom is the music. And when in the hands of people like Hip Hop Dan and Harry Hotter last night, it’s going to be an optimal sonic experience.

Need some Harry Hotter mixes in your life to tide you over until Saturday night’s Bliss at the U Street Music Hall?

Here’s his minimix for Saturday Night’s Bliss event!

Ad if that’s not enough, check his Coolout mix from last summer, STILL one of the kingpin contributions to the local music collection of last year with some of the most creative blends and re-edits you’ll hear anywhere.

And here’s Hip Hop Dan’s latest from January, the “Sort of Like a Dream” mix, taking things in an aurally different direction, with some indie rock mixes that provide in his own words, “a more serene and balanced aural experience. The goal was to create a foggy, dream-like atmosphere, one with few peaks and valleys but instead spongey and shapeless. Sort of like a dream.”

A First Weekend at the Temple of Boom – Still more notes and news on U Street Music Hall…

22 Mar
Kraddy’s hip hop flavored dubstep assault was one of
the most exciting sets so far at U Street Music Hall

From here on in, we’re calling DC’s newest and latest venue, the U Street Music Hall, the Temple of Boom. It’s deserved. The first weekend of the hall’s existence showed many denizens of the electronic dance music scene that you don’t have to travel to London’s Fabric anymore to hear proper dubstep on a proper system. 20,000 watts of subatomic bass are clearly enough for us to proclaim this DC soundsystem as #1 Champion Sound, and apparently, if you were at the spot on Saturday night (as our own Chris “Lenins Tomb” Kelly was), one of the club’s ownership, Jesse Tittsworth, is the first to assume the mantle of being the club’s chief sound bwoy. For me it was west coast DJ and former Glitch Mob member Kraddy’s assault on the system with bass heavy, dubstep leaning hip hop remixes at 88DC’s Friday event as part of Forward Festival 3 that proved particularly emblematic of the heavy bass sonic smackdown. When the limiter gets taken off of that system at a certain point of the night, the soundwaves quite literally invigorate the dance floor with positive vibrations. Gone are the days when that was just a deep house night promise laden in the consciousness of an elevated mindstate. Ask anyone who went to the venue this weekend, and everyone has a tale of feeling bass in their nether regions, feeling their hair stand on end, or feeling their clothes pulse and bounce to the music while still securely on their person. It’s certainly awe inspiring and promises to be a calling card of the venue in the months and years to come.

Testing the levels on the other end, Dubfire and Nadastrom played on Sunday night, sets of house and funk that showed the system to be as warm as it is deep, the real test coming this coming Friday as not since the days of DC’s Red Lounge (a legendary deep house spot that closed in 2005) has there been an event with the truly the level and quality of sound necessary for it. The inaugural “Red Fridays,” will be manned by the most critically underrated duo in DC, Meistro and Deep Sang, whose “Sol Power” monthly at Dahlak features only the most sensuous and melodic of deep house, and I, myself am very much intrigued as to what this regular Friday event will bring. Props to those who have spun at Trinidad and Tobago Association or 411 New York Avenue (where Chicago veteran Ron Trent spun a set of such magnificence on Friday night that it showed why his is a master of his craft) for keeping deep house in DC alive, but this weekly party at a spotlight venue definitely more than breathes some life into things.

Add to that this coming Thursday night’s big event with Hip Hop Dan and Chad Hugo from the Neptunes (Dan has been known to be the Neptunes’ tour DJ on occasion, hence the connection) which will be the first time actual hip hop will be on the system for sure, as well as the debut of part of the club ownership Will Eastman’s Bliss on Saturday, and we’ll definitely get a more full feel for sure as to the evolving nature of the city’s quick, second by second rising in reputation destination point nightspot.