Winter All-Campus Dance

    Get out your dancing shoes, ’cause this year’s Winter
    concert is techno-heavy. DJ duo L.A. Riots’ abrasive synth remixes rattle out
    the middle-end like Justice did so often last year with club bangers “D.A.N.C.E.”
    and “Waters of Nazareth,” until our speakers finally blew out from exhaustion.
    In a similar fashion, Lazaro Casanova — who sounds like “Crown trickling into a
    nice glass and the sound of ice blocks clinking,” according to his MySpace —
    chops and glitches out dance singles from last year until they hurt your head.
    Both of these Daft Punk disciples mold former electro-shred into club gold on
    Thursday night; it could possibly make for a rave to rival Spring Quarter’s Sun
    God Festival.


    HEADLINER: L.A. Riots

    Last Night A Remix Saved My Life: Party Boys Chop and Glitch Past Hits For Their Own Metal Machine Music.

    By Chris Kokiousis

    Associate Hiatus Editor

    These two dudes have only been loafing around the Los
    Angeles
    party scene for a few months, but after a
    handful of solid club remixes, the city’s scenesters decided to rev the
    word-of-mouth hype train. The purpose of L.A. Riots’ existence is to make
    parties start out of thin air­ — because as we all know, good music and a large
    crowd don’t necessarily mean a good time. Fun depends on many intricacies, and
    Daniel Ledisko and Jo’B succeed at killing the crowd with blasted glitch-house
    pulled from the likes of Kylie Minogue, VHS or Beta and Chromeo’s back
    catalogue.

    Their take on “Switchblade” by Heart’s Revolution hits you
    hard with slabs of crunchy synth goodness and sexy robot-mod vocals warning
    dancers that something’s coming. Of course, nobody pays attention and the beat
    rages on. In contrast, the remix of Justice’s “The Party (feat. Uffie)” mashes
    and rearranges any previous flow the original had, instead honing the beefed-up
    beats to accentuate Uffie’s scrambled musings on her typical club routine.

    Most likely, L.A. Riots’ set will combine their visionary
    mixes with straight-up techno and dance-pop classics pulled from their choicest
    crates of vinyl. And how good can a dance party be without a freaky light show,
    complete with strobe and colored bulbs? Expect the whole color spectrum to
    unfold during the duo’s set. They’ve already rubbed up against dance greats,
    and their online mixtapes flow like a clubrat’s stream of consciousness after a
    few mixed drinks; all that’s left now is to create hits of their own.

    Lazaro Casanova

    By Sonia Minden

    Associate Hiatus Editor

    Lazaro Casanova’s MySpace reads, “I drink to make other
    people interesting.” But the rising DJ — hailing from the lazy breeze of Miami’s
    electro-scene — doesn’t need much help
    to draw attention to his fresh brand of aggressive, pulsating jams.

    Some original fare brings to mind his hometown’s beachy sass
    (see: “Shorts and Heels,” inspired by the styles of calf-flaunting chicas);
    others, like “Hearts Revolution,” mesh Daft Punk-esque flair with excerpts of
    little Japanese girls

    squeaking foreign things­ — very cool. Although he’s been
    known to experiment with sounds from the Knife, Chromeo and Ernesto Bastian,
    it’s his own work that hits the spot. Impressive talent, coming from a
    shaggy-haired, lesser-known Revolver resident.

    Chances are, his act will steam up stages across the nation
    and the ocean, and he’ll be the next big thang — so, UCSD students, get your
    shades to shield the laser-beam beats, and catch Casanova’s house of shot
    callin’.

    RX Bandits

    By Chris Kokousis

    Associate Hiatus Editor

    Previously scheduled openers Ima Robot pulled out at the last
    minute due to illness, so as a quick replacement we get emo-ska mainstay RX
    Bandits, who might tickle your lingering middle-school fancy.

    The group specializes in soaring chug-rockers that usually
    peak with a trumpet flourish or two. Featured track “Crushing Destroyer” from
    their latest release …And the Battle Begun pairs indie dissonance with minimal
    lounge chill, but then strums itself right into prog silliness.

    For a more familiar whine, check out “In Her Drawer,” a
    straightforward blast of rock showmanship that hits every conceivable rhythm
    and tone in their displaced subgenre.
    The group can’t seem to settle into a groove because it switched between
    unadulterated emo polish and Mars Volta-esque extravagance.

    No matter how you feel about the group’s questionable style,
    it’s hard not to appreciate the six Bandits’ musical chops and dedication;
    expect lots of passionate head-bobbing, groovy bass interludes and SoCal steez.

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