Lido club Wigwam goes large this New Year's Eve with arguably the best line-up in the city. For their "rave" party, they've secured French dub legends High Tone, British producer Daniel Avery, Berlin producer Die Wilde Jagd, and Chengdu AV coldwave duo Stolen. The strongest can make their way to Wigwam for the afterparty, starting at around 4am.
There are no tickets, simply:
- @wigwam on Weibo
- Connect with friends. The six degrees of separation theory says that no matter who you are, you can get to know us through at most five people.
Daniel Avery
Daniel Avery is an English electronic music producer and DJ from Bournemouth. Avery first began producing in 2009 under the name Stopmakingme, including for Little Boots, Hercules and Love Affair, and Metronomy, but reverted to his birth name for releases from 2012 onward. His debut full-length album, Drone Logic, was released in 2013.He issued a DJ-Kicks compilation in 2016. In 2018, his sophomore full-length, Song for Alpha, was issued on Phantasy Sound and Mute Records.
High Tone
From Lyon, France, their music styles blend from 1970s Jamaican dub, hip hop, jungle, drum and bass, techno, to Oriental music. HIGH TONE is the originator of the new DUB music in Europe, focusing on fusion and sound experiment, and creating the first electronic DUB music band.
Die Wilde Jagd
Berlin producer and songwriter Sebastian Lee Philipp's music project, launched in collaboration with producer Ralf Beck and several other musicians. Their self-titled debut album, released in 2015, is full of guitar loops, electronic percussion, drums, synthesizers and German lyrics. Die Wilde Jagd regularly performs in Europe and elsewhere, and publishes live music selected by the group.
Stolen
From Chengdu, composed of five musicians and a VJ from France, Stolen is a live band with visual elements. Their music is a fusion of traditional rock and roll with the synthesizer popularity of the early days, and the hot techno, trip-hop, coldwave and other elements of the modern electronic music scene. New Order frontman described them as "a young Chinese electronic band trying to express their own unique voice in an overwhelming commercial 'trash-music' environment" and invited them to be their sole guests on their six-city European tour in October.