Referring to artists as “Legends” probably happens more often than it should, but it’s more than apt when referring to Chicago’s Green Velvet. Together, they released Freakin‘ on Tchami’s Confessions label, which Dombresky further went on to release a host of singles and remixes. Since then, he’s found his way in with Tchami, a fellow Frenchman. He’s been producing music for over a decade now, finding his way into the mainstream level after an official remix of A-Trak’s We All Fall Down in 2015. Hailing from France, house artist Dombresky is also coming to the Gorge. He’s also got a label, too, at Do Not Duplicate Recordings. You also might have recognized him from Boo! at the Wa-Mu Theater in Seattle last October. ![]() Pino Sagliocco of Live Nation Spain summed up the mood in the room when he said: “They can’t just ban events because we had an accident. That’s like not flying any more because there was a plane crash.Bijou has kept busy for the last two years, releasing new music this year, following his 15-track album Diamond City, which came out in July of 2020. He added that violence and crime are far higher on average at rock and country festivals than at EDM ones, but stories about EDM are “sexier” and sell more newspapers. Mark Lawrence of the Association for Electronic Music (US) said governments in countries like the US and Australia have a lack of understanding of rave culture and don’t realise how well organised most EDM events are, leading to a “passive discrimination” against dance music promoters. The Dance Club: The beat goes on panel at the 28th International Live Music Conference (ILMC) touched on the often heavy-handed responses to deaths at EDM events, which have in the past included the cancelling of entire festivals and shows. Over 65,000 people attended the 2016 festival, which saw performances by artists and DJs such as Armand Van Helden, Ghastly, Marshmello and Gouryella. Undercover police and private security were on site at Beyond Wonderland, as were over 100 sheriff’s deputies and a number of sniffer dogs. Undercover police and private security were on site at Beyond Wonderland, as were over 100 sheriff’s deputies and a number of sniffer dogs If they invite us, odds are we’re going to come play.” The state and local agencies are cracking down. DEA spokesman Timothy Massino told Your EDM: “There’s clearly a huge synthetic drug problem in the scene. It was revealed in September that plainclothes agents of the American Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) have begun infiltrating EDM events in an attempt to weed out drug dealers. ![]() Such deaths have increased media attention on dance music events, especially in the US, and led to crackdowns by local authorities. ![]() ![]() One person, 22-year-old John Hoang Dinh Vo, also died after suffering an ecstasy-related seizure at the previous year’s Beyond Wonderland. The electronic dance music (EDM) festival, promoted by part-Live Nation-owned Insomniac, had announced a tightening of security around the 2016 event after a spate of drug-related deaths at similar festivals in California. Twenty people were also hospitalised, but all were treated and discharged by Sunday, said Miller. Jodi Miller, a spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, said the arrests – 116 on Friday 18 March and 128 on Saturday 19 March – were for various offences, including trespassing, being drunk in public and drug-related crimes, chiefly possession of ecstasy/MDMA with intent to supply. A total of 244 people were arrested at last weekend’s Beyond Wonderland festival in at the San Manuel Amphitheater in Devore, California.
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