The Beat Goes On

The Beat Goes On

UMF Coverage: Dada Life standout in UMF Korea tent

Amongst a stage lineup that included Nicky Romero, Porter Robinson, Dirty South, and Wolfgang Gartner, the Swedish duo Dada Life stole the UMF Korea tent tonight with their perfect blend of electo elements: fist pumping, singable hooks, and buildups that ended with the all-too-satisfying drop.

 

While the intro of the beloved “Kick Out the Epic Motherfucker” started things out right, the standout song of the hour-long set was a mashup of the “b-a-n-a-n-a-s” portion of Gwen Stefani’s “Hollaback Boy” with Knife Party’s collaboration with Swedish House Mafia, “Antidote.” While the combination doesn’t sound feasible, the end result came out nearly flawless, as if the zings and pews of “Antidote” had been born to accompany the instructional spelling of Miss Stefani. 

 

The rest of the set was just as enjoyable, with a remix of Kaskade’s “Llove”, Duck Sauce’s “The Big Bad Wolf” and their own “Happy Violence.” While the DJs themselves remained clothed normally, several crowd members sported banana costumes and the duo stayed good to their reputation by pouring champagne on the audience in what has become their signature move (the Dada Life emblem is a champagne bottle with two bananas crossed over it).

 

It was obvious the DJs enjoyed performing, and even more obvious when their finale, an extended remix of “Kick Out the Epic Motherfucker” was cut off to ensure Wolfgang Gartner played a full set. An hour was not enough for Dada Life, and it wasn’t enough for their fans either. If they could rally every sweaty body in the tent to a frenzy in just an hour, the possibilities of a solo show are endless. And likely involve more champagne.

Have a thought? We welcome your input, but please be polite and stay on topic wherever possible. Your comment may be deleted if it is inappropriately off topic or promotional or if it is unnecessarily rude or contains personal attacks. We may delete comments for other reasons as well. Just keep it simple and focus on your points as respectfully as possible.

We allow and encourage comments employing satire, wit and irony to make points. Do not flag comments just because you disagree. Flagged comments will be immunized from further flagging unless they stray far from the guidelines and do not add to the discussion. Before flagging a comment you think is offensive, consider your time might be better spent rebutting it than censoring it.

blog comments powered by Disqus
Donate