CamelPhat Announce New Record Label Coming Summer 2021


CamelPhat just announced their new label coming Summer 2021.

The British duo consisting of Dave Whelan and Mike Di Scala formed back in 2004 and have since become one of the biggest names in tech house. Best known for their massive 2017 hit “Cola,” CamelPhat continue to set the bar while churning out expert level melodic bangers.

Considering CamelPhat have already established themselves as leading tastemakers in dance music, a record label is the instinctive next step. From the creative minds that brought us “Breathe” and “Panic Room” comes a new wave of music from future artists.

So far, no word on the a label name or if they’ll exclusively offer house and techno — but CamelPhat are taking submissions now. Producers are encouraged to send demos via SoundCloud links only, here.

We can’t wait to hear what’s in store!

CamelPhat’s Announcement





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Marshmello Releases His First Persian Language Single “Lavandia” Alongside Arash

Continuing his path to global influence, Marshmello has just released his first Persian-language spoken single, “Lavandia.” Mello joined forces with Iranian artist and Persia’s Got Talent TV star Arash to make it happen. 





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Kate Hudson says controversy around Sia film ‘Music’ is “an important conversation to have”


Kate Hudson has spoken about the controversy sparked by Sia casting a non-autistic actor to play an autistic role in her film Music.

Maddie Ziegler plays Music, a young autistic woman, in the movie, whose guardian is her half-sister Zu (played by Hudson).

Director Sia has faced a huge backlash for her casting choices in the film, which many have criticised as ableist and said could perpetuate harmful stereotypes about autistic people. Some of the scenes in the movie have also come under fire, with a character restrained in a position that has caused injuries and death in reality in one scene.

During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Hudson said the criticisms around the movie were “an important conversation to have”.

“For me, when I hear that there’s anybody that feels left out, I feel terrible,” she said. “I think when people see the film they will see the amount of love and sensitivity that was put into it, but it is an important conversation to have – not just about this movie, but as a whole about representation.

 

“I think it’s an ongoing important dialogue to be had about neurotypical actors portraying neurodivergent characters, with people who are experts and really know how to engage in the conversation. I encourage it, really and truly. Just to say – we are listening.”

Earlier this month (February 4), Sia once again addressed the controversy around Music and confirmed a warning would be added to the movie. “The motion picture MUSIC will, moving forward, have this warning at the head of the movie: ‘MUSIC in no way condones or recommends the use of restraint on autistic people,’” she wrote in a now-deleted tweet.

“I plan to remove the restraint scenes from all future printings,” Sia continued. “I listened to the wrong people and that is my responsibility, my research was clearly not thorough enough, not wide enough.”

In the wake of Music receiving two nominations at the Golden Globes 2021, a petition was launched calling for the film to have its nominations rescinded. At the time of writing, over 100,0000 people have signed the petition.

In a one-star review of Music, NME said: “Called a “magical” presence – and treated as more of a mystical pixie than a human being, Ziegler’s character Music is all about othering over acceptance […] The Sia-penned soundtrack is sung largely by Hudson, whose decent vocals are perhaps the film’s saving grace, but it’s still not nearly enough to make Music a sound proposition.”





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Ibiza’s Reopening Plan for Bars & Restaurants Starts Next Month


Dance music hotspot Ibiza will reportedly begin to reopen bars and restaurants next month.

The Balearic government recently announced its de-escalation plan, which goes into effect March 2nd. For bars, restaurants and clubs forced to close their doors due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, this could be the light at the end of the tunnel.

At the beginning of March, island businesses in Ibiza, Formentera, Menorca and Mallorca will have the opportunity welcome guests into open terraces and outdoor spaces. The major criticism here being the majority of bars and restaurants do not have these open areas.

If all goes well without significant spikes in cases, indoor spaces with CO2 meters will reportedly be allowed to reopen starting March 16th.

With tourism being one of Spain’s most vital industries, the pressure is on to reopen. However, the Balearic Islands as a whole are still considered high risk for coronavirus.

Read the original report here.

 

H/T: DJ Mag, Source: The Olive Press | Photo via Hï Ibiza



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UK Home Office Publishes New PSA Video Condemning Raving

A new PSA video published by the UK Home Office condemns all gatherings and meet-ups, including raves, as illegal in the wake of current lockdown restrictions throughout the country.





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Haim on Joni Mitchell: “Her views of rhythm have always been in our blood”


Haim have shared details of just how strongly the music of Joni Mitchell has influenced the sister trio’s sound.

In an article published by Rolling Stone on Thursday February 18 (as part of the publication’s Women Shaping the Future issue), Haim talked of how Mitchell served as a “key inspiration” for their own music.

Danielle Haim described Mitchell’s 1974 live album ‘Miles of Aisles’ as being the catalyst for her and her sisters’ love affair with music. “There’s a little bit of everything,” she said, “songs from all her albums up until then, and she’s playing them with the L.A. Express, which was this amazing jazz band.”

Her sister, Este, added, “[Mitchell] was getting more into jazz in the seventies, so the record is a reimagining of a lot of her early work through this jazz lens.”

Alana Haim discussed how “every year her songs take on new meanings”. “I think that’s the beauty of Joni,” she said, “discovering new things in her music.

“I could listen to a song like ‘A Case of You’ when I was in my early twenties, and that song has taken on a whole new meaning now that I’m almost 30.”

“Her views of rhythm have always been in our blood,” added Danielle. “That’s something about her songwriting that I love, because it’s so percussive and rhythmic.”

Haim’s reflections on Mitchell’s music are well-timed, with the pop-rock band sharing an expanded edition of their third studio album, ‘Women In Music Pt. III’, last Friday, featuring collaborations with Taylor Swift and Thundercat on their songs ‘Gasoline’ and ‘3am’ respectively.

Upon the release of the extended album and its ‘Gasoline’ remix, Swift took to Instagram to declare her affections for the Haims and jokingly proclaim herself as “the fourth Haim sister”.

“Cancel the DNA test I’m the 4th Haim sister and this song is the only proof I need,” Swift said.





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Andrew Rayel Talks About His Musical Origins, Surviving 2020, and Find Your Harmony [Interview]


It can be tough finding an equilibrium as a musician. While, generally speaking, electronic artists have much more license and musical freedom than mainstream pop artists, there are still constant pressures to be dealt with, whether internal or external. One artist who seems to have figured out the equilibrium is Moldovan producer/DJ Andrew Rayel. Born Andrei Rata, he is a classically trained pianist and musician. He got an early start learning music as a child and over his teenage years, he honed his craft and developed a signature sound. Rayel got his big break back in 2012 when his early tracks caught the ear of Armin van Buuren, and Rayel’s tracks started becoming a fixture on Armin’s A State of Trance radio show.

Fast forward almost a decade later and Andrew Rayel is one of the most recognizable names in the trance genre. He’s got a long discography including two studio albums, his own record label, InHarmony, and he’s homing in on 250 episodes of his own radio show, Find Your Harmony. Already off to a quick start in 2021, Andrew just released his second single of the year, “Silver Lining.” We got the chance to sit down and chat with Andrew about his new single, his growth as an artist, his burgeoning radio show, quarantine things, and much more. Read our full interview below.

Hey Andrew! Thanks for chatting with us. We’re coming out of one of the strangest years ever. Tell us about your 2020 and how you got through without touring and shows?

“Well, it was definitely a very hard, very weird year for all of us. Honestly, I…probably nobody expected the year to go down that way. I had a bunch of shows the first two months, in January and February, and everything was going fine. January is always a slow month, I had like three or four shows. February was like a full-on, three shows a weekend. I did A State of Trance, I did a bunch of festivals in Europe. It was looking like it was going to be fine, we even managed to do a Find Your Harmony show, the first planned of many, in New York at Avant Gardner. So, I was able to have one solo show; it’s my brand, it’s one of those shows that I invest a lot of money in, I bring in a big crew, I think it was around 3,000 people. And it looked great, it looked like it was going to be one of those great years.

On March 8, I remember that specifically; all the news started to come in, all the countries started to close down. I know a lot of my compatriots that were late to come back to the country, they got stuck in the airports, they got stuck in places for weeks, they had to sleep in weird places just to get back home. I was one of the lucky ones to get back right before everything started to close down. The first two months, it was like, yeah, okay, we’re just going to wait inside, like a short vacation. I’m going to stay home in the studio and not go anywhere and probably in like a month or two, worst case three months, this is going to be over. We’re going to get back on tours, summer was upon us, Tomorrowland, EDC, but they said we’re going to do EDC in October. It looked like there was hope in 2020, regarding touring. But, then, time was flying and things were getting worse and worse and worse.

I think one of the things that got me through the quarantine was with my radio show, Find Your Harmony. We went with audio-visual live streaming. Usually, the show was just a pre-mix with my voice and some visuals. Then I thought, I’m at home, I have a lot of time, I’ll definitely be free one day a week to do this radio show live. Since then, basically, it’s almost one a week, I’m doing Find Your Harmony live from the studio. Mixing tracks live, talking, all the cool stuff, one of the things that got me through 2020. And, of course, a lot of production, a lot of writing, a lot of making music. I think I released six tracks. A lot of music and a lot that wasn’t released in 2020, a lot of those demos are still here and hopeful I can release them this year. So, a very busy year regarding the music, not so much regarding the touring.”

Tell us what to expect from Find Your Harmony as we lead up to Episode 250?

“We’re thinking, what’s the best thing we can do right now? We were thinking about a virtual festival with animation, different DJs just recording stuff in front of a green screen. There’s a bunch of ideas, but we’re definitely going to make something big, getting some special guests. Doing something online, that’s the best thing we can do right now. As I told you, last year we had so many shows planned for Find Your Harmony. Different festivals, different solo shows, we were going to do the Hollywood Palladium. We were going to do a lot of big shows, in the U.S., in Asia, everywhere. And, obviously, everything got cancelled. So, now we’re just making the best we can with what we have. So, yeah, the plan is to either create a virtual festival or one big long show with different guest mixes. That’s the best we can do, but there will still be a lot of cool surprises.”

Let’s talk about your new song “Silver Lining.” Tell us a little about the production of the track, it’s probably a little bit different from what your fans would normally expect.

“It is. I told my fans already while teasing the song, trance is my life, it’s my favorite thing in the world, I’m never going to stop making trance. I grew up with trance music, it’s in my blood and my soul, and that releasing a track like “Silver Lining”, which is a little bit more pop-oriented, doesn’t mean that I’m going completely that way and I’m not going to do trance anymore. I just want to be honest with my fans. It’s one of those tracks that I wanted to try more for the radio. Obviously, I want to grow the Find Your Harmony and Andrew Rayel brands, and one of the strongest ways to do that is the radio. Unfortunately, not many big radio stations play trance, so you want to go with a little bit more pop-vocal style. Obviously there will be trance remixes of this song that I can play in my normal sets. But, we went with more of a summer vibe, with a concept that is pretty much related to what’s happening in the world right now. Silver lining, even though there’s so many awful things happening in the world right now, there’s still positive things to take from the whole thing. For me, it’s probably spending more time with my family, spending more time in the studio making more music, connecting with more people online. But, yeah, it’s just one of those things that even though there’s so many bad things happening in the world right, there’s still a positive outcome.”

Are you looking to experiment with new sounds and genres going forward? What can the fans expect from you this year?

“I don’t think so. I’m still oriented more towards trance music and there’s so many great trance singles coming up in the future, of course the FYH 250 anthem, which is going to be a big surprise for a lot of people. I’m bringing back, I think you’re the first one I’m telling this, there used to be a style I created back in the day, and a lot of people have been asking about it and craving it for 10 years already. It’s called Aether, it’s one of the songs I made back in the day, and then I made that specific genre into a style. So, everytime I released an original mix, there would also be an Aether mix. So, it’s a specific sound that people really loved, and they were like, oh, you should do that again. So the FYH 250 anthem will probably be one of those Aether songs.”

Tell us a little about how you originally got into music? How did you manage to breakout and become an international artist?

“That’s such a long story. I’ve been in the industry since 2010. To make it very short, I was nine years old, my parents saw that I had this attraction to music, so they decided I should go to a musical school. I went to an audition in the middle of the year, usually they would accept kids in September, and it was already December, pretty much half of the year, I missed. But, they said it was fine, he has everything he needs in order to learn music. So, seven years of piano. While I was in the school, I realized, I’m not a big fan of learning other people’s songs. They would teach us Chopin, Beethoven, Mozart, all of that stuff. I had to learn that, but I wasn’t the biggest fan. I always wanted to compose my music.

So, I started to see what’s around, obviously I was composing music on the piano, but like 2-3 months later, I would forget it. And I was like there’s got to be a way to record all of this and save all of this. So that’s how I found out about all that software that was the new thing. I think I was like 12 or 13, one of my friends gave me a CD with a program, it’s still around, a lot of people use it, FL Studio. Years later, I moved to QBase, but that was the first DAW software I used to import my melodies and stuff like that. And then it was just years of practicing, learning to compose, arrangements, writing, mixing, mastering, all of that.

Up until I think I was around 17 years old, when I signed one of my tracks to a Russian label. And they were very connected to Armin van Buuren, they were sending a lot of their promos to Armin and he was supporting the music. That’s pretty much how Armin got one of my first songs, started to play the hell out of it. After like three or four releases on that label and all of them were supported by Armin, he was talking about those songs in his A State of Trance radio show. I got an email from Ruben de Ronde, and he said, hey, we really like your tracks, we see you’re very consistent, do you want to join Armada Music? Obviously I was blown away by that, and, of course I said yes. So that was in 2010, that’s when I got signed to Armada, and since then, every other year, it’s just been a bunch of songs that Armin is supporting. Like three or four songs in the ASOT Top 20 at the end of each year. I got into DJ Mag, I don’t even remember the number, I was like 70-something, then 50-something, then I was the highest climber one of the years, all the way up to like 28. But, yeah, released my first album, Find Your Harmony, started the radio show and the brand, released my second studio album, Moments. Toured all over the world, and I’ve gotten to the place where I can do my own shows and be the happiest person in the world. It’s still only the beginning.”

Have you been able to tour anywhere yet?

“I did only one show, it was in December, it was a Rave Culture show with W&W, they did a show in Thailand. So, it was the only show that I’ve done during the pandemic so far. Thailand didn’t have many cases, but we had to go through a whole process to get there. It was a bunch of papers to get before, so like a month of our guys working on papers with some embassies. Then during the whole stay they were testing us like every 2-3 days, we had to stay in a hotel for two weeks. Getting your temperature checked like 2-3 times a day. Then at the end they gave us this big ass certificate, like I graduated something. But, that was the only show we did.”

Outside of studio time and working on music, what did you do with all of your free time at home, any binge watch recommendations?

“Oh yeah, I’m a big fan of movies, I’ve been watching everything, I’ve been watching Wanda-Vision, all the Marvel stuff. If you name it, I’ve probably watched it.”

What are you looking forward to accomplishing this year, and any words for the fans?

“The main thing right now is the FYH brand and the radio show in general. I’m really working hard with my team to take it to the next level, to grow it. We’re getting higher numbers on the YouTube channel every week. Right now we have 500-600 people tune in live every Thursday, and then 20-30, sometimes 40,000 people watching it later. So, that’s the main thing we’re working on right now. And, of course, the label, InHarmony Music, which is the main source of music for the radio show.

So, we signed a lot of great producers, you probably haven’t heard of them yet, but I believe these guys are the future of trance music. Robbie Seed, Courtney Morgan, Tensteps. These guys are all over the place, from New York, Poland, Kuala Lumpur, Germany, they’re all producing amazing tracks. They’re also being heavily supported by Armin, Gareth Emery, W&W, Ferry Corsten, all the big trance guys. So, the label is also one of the main things we’re focusing on right now. And, of course, the music, my singles, the big aim right now for 2021, is to release a single like every six weeks. That’s pretty much the aim, to do even more music, because we think that people are very hungry just being at home, being bored, and they consume music super-fast. So, we’re probably just going to release a little bit more.”

Check out the latest single from Andrew Rayel, “Silver Lining” out now on Armada. You can also re-watch the Find Your Harmony 2020 Yearmix for three hours of Andrew’s favorite tracks from last year.



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HVDES Drops Menacing “Blood Demon Art” EP on deadmau5’s mau5trap Imprint

Los Angeles-based producer HVDES has dropped her EP Blood Demon Art. Reflecting her dark persona, the EP, which arrived by way of deadmau5‘s mau5trap banner, delivers brooding lyrics, bass-heavy beats, and a deeply sinister theme.





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DJ Snake and Malaa re-enter the Secret Room to complete their back-to-back trilogy – Dancing Astronaut


The year-long countdown until DJ Snake and Malaa share the stage at Bayfront Park has been reset amid Ultra’s 2021 cancellation, but there’s still a silver lining to the heartbreaking news. Following the Parisian cohorts’ Best Of Both Worlds stream and debut Secret Room go-around, the Pardon My French half disclosed a third back-to-back stream—unexpectedly, of course—and returned to the dim latter locale for another ID-laden set.

When Malaa prefaced the stream with “it’s about ID music tonight,” no one on Earth stopped to question it, considering that the duo’s previous appearances included a mountain of new music. Although nothing is 100 percent confirmed at the time of this writing, the tracklist currently points to ACRAZE as the house mastermind behind the introduction, Honey & Badger‘s attachment to the one directly after, a potential ID and Malaa-headed rework of Petit Biscuit tossed in the mix, and a handful of others.

Enjoy a half-hour of house courtesy of DJ Snake and Malaa below.

Featured image: Jonathan April

Tags: DJ Snake, Malaa, secret room

Categories: Music






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Megan Thee Stallion wants to be “up there with the OGs” of female rap


Megan Thee Stallion has said that she wants to be “up there with the OGs” of female rap in a new interview.

The Houston rapper self-released her first EP ‘Rich Ratchet’ in 2016 and has gone on to be one of the biggest rappers currently working.

Speaking to Harper’s Bazaar, Megan discussed her ambitions. The article noted her five-year goal in 2019 was to become a household name. Asked what her goal is now, she said: “I feel like when it’s all said and done, when people want to talk about female rap … they are definitely going to have to put my name up there with the OGs.”

Last year, the star’s single ‘Savage’ and Cardi B collaboration ‘WAP’ took over the charts, with the latter in particular breaking records. Asked if she considers herself a pop star now, Megan replied: “I’m a rapper. Rap will always be my heart. That’s really what I love to do.”

Megan Thee Stallion CREDIT: Rich Fury/Getty Images for Visible

She also spoke in the interview about her impending graduation from university. “I cannot wait,” she said. “I’m going to have the biggest graduation party. But when all of this happened [the coronavirus pandemic], I’m like, ‘Wow, so nobody is going to see me walk across the stage?’”

Last week (February 16), Megan tweeted about graduating from Texas Southern University and her plans for afterwards. “Mam Im abt to graduate in the fall and still gone open my facility,” she said in response to a fan who tweeted they were happy Megan chose rapping over working in the health field.

“They swore I wasn’t gone get that degree,” she added. “SIKE.”

The rapper has previously explained how she plans to use the income from her music career to open an assisted-living facility. Speaking to People in 2020, she said she hopes to enlist the help of her classmates to run the facility.

“I really wanted to be an administrator over a hospital, but I knew I still wanted to be Megan Thee Stallion. I was like, ‘What can I do?’” she said. “I was like, ‘You know what, I’m gonna open an assisted-living facility and use the money that I make from rapping to open it. Then I’m gonna let my classmates run it.”





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