An iconic party bows out in style.
That tight-knit scene came out in full force on Wednesday, August 8th for Low End Theory's last party ever, at The Airliner in Lincoln Heights. Though tickets were allocated mostly for "friends and family," there was still a line stretching to the end of the block, and it was nearly impossible to move inside during the night's peak. The queue to get onto the second level was so absurd it was impossible for me to see the Odd Future reunion going on up there. (Missing key acts while trying to move around the venue is basically a rite of passage for Low End Theory attendees.)
If Low End Theory's crowd remained unwavering over the years, so did its musical ethos, a sound rooted in hip-hop but extended out to many other planes. Wednesday's special guests outlined that diversity. You had rappers Tyler, The Creator, Earl Sweatshirt and A$AP Rocky, glitch-hop pioneers The Glitch Mob, pop-crossover star TOKiMONSTA, Brainfeeder artist Taylor McFerrin and Utah producer Tsuruda—artists who have taken their sound in very different directions but remain grounded in experimental hip-hop.
Even with these guests, the night belonged to the party's core artists: Daddy Kev, DJ Nobody and DJ D Styles. Another Low End Theory member, Jake Jenkins, played my favourite set, a raucous and bumpy affair that jumped from new favourites (Ross From Friends) to old-school anthems like Hudson Mohawke's "Scud Books." It was around this time it hit me: in this sea of head-nodders, fist-pumpers and dancers, something crucial for US dance music was coming to an end. The energy in the room was a mixture of ecstasy and melancholy, which gave every track an electric force.
When the residents jumped back on to bring the party home, the crowd was so locked they could have played anything. They went for old hip-hop and boom-bap beat scene stuff. The last track was "Excursions" by A Tribe Called Quest, a group who not only gave Low End Theory its name but helped to inspire its spiritual approach to hip-hop, combining jazz and experimental music while focusing on soul and artistry over fashion. In their farewell statement on Instagram, the crew said that they had "overstayed their welcome." But judging from the room of producers and diehard fans who stayed until the very last song, that was far from the truth. The impact of what Low End Theory accomplished will last much longer than their residency at The Airliner.
Photo credit /
Dan From Another Place (via Instagram)
from RA - Event Reviews Resident Advisor

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