SF Show of the Week // GO4FREE to Boys Noize at Mezzanine 7/24 (FRI)

Boys Noize Record 10 Year Written by Nik Crossman //

Boys Noize with SALVA, Spank Rock, SCNTST, Cities Aviv, PILO, Escor Krist //
Mezzanine – San Francisco
July 24th, 2015 //

German producer Alex Rhida, aka Boys Noize, has made a name for himself as one of the most illustrious DJs today. Merging various styles of electronic music, Rhida’s innovative sound has earned him acclaimed awards, such as “Top 10 DJs Who Rule the Earth” by Rolling Stone and “Best Electronic Artist” by Beatport.

In 2005, Rhida launched his independent record label Boysnoize Records (BNR) to bring his own music to the world without forfeiting creative control.

“I don’t compromise when it comes to music,” the 32-year-old Rhida says. “I do what I think is cool and what I like and not what the market wants or people may expect. Maintaining artistic freedom has always been the most important thing to me — for my own music and for anyone on my label!”

A decade later, BNR remains independent and celebrates 10 years of supporting more than a dozen artists across 100 releases.

On Friday, Boysnoize Records continues the #BNR10YR celebration in SF at Mezzanine with SALVA, Spank Rock, SCNTST, Cities Aviv, PILO and Escor Krist all hitting the decks before Rhida takes the stage.

You can buy tickets for $25, or you could win a pair of tickets by registering your full name and email below.

Contest ends Friday at 3 p.m.


Follow Showbams on Twitter for more contest giveaways throughout the week. Be the first to respond to our contest tweets to GO4FREE to these shows:

Bomba Estéreo: Monday, July 20 at The New Parish
Federico Aubele: Thursday, July 23 at Leo’s Music Club
Summer Soul Roller Disco feat. Sake1: Thursday, July 23 at Mezzanine
Heems: Friday, July 24 at The New Parish
J Stalin: Friday, July 24 at Slim’s
Social Studies: Friday, July 24 at Great American Music Hall
The Motels: Friday, July 24 at The Chapel


Win-2-Tickets

Enter your name (First and Last) along with your email below. If you win a contest, you’ll be notified on the day the contest ends (details above).

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Santigold captivates a packed Fox Theater Oakland with some help from her SG1 dancers

SantigoldBy Mike Frash //

Santigold //
Fox Theater Oakland – Oakland
December 12th, 2012 //

As we near the end of 2012, it’s safe to say that Santigold has had a long and successful year. The 36-year-old singer-songwriter’s star is rising fast, and she’s done it by releasing genre-bending tracks that are super catchy and by also touring endlessly.

In support of her current material, Santigold (born Santi White) first appeared in the Bay Area headlining Sea of Dreams on New Years Eve almost a year ago. That was four months before her addictive LP Master of My Make-Believe was released. Santi played a short festival set at Outside Lands opposite Jack White, so it was a pleasure to experience a full Santigold show at a sold out Fox Theater Oakland on Wednesday.

Santigold’s unique sound blends electronic production, indie rock sensibilities and hip hop phrasing and confidence. She’s likable & relatable in her new record, and it translates at her live show.

From the beginning of “Go!” the disparate crowd was fully engaged all night long, even during great ballads like “The Riot’s Gone.” She said her bay area fans are her favorite rather convincingly, she smiled and showed emotion comfortably on stage, and her stage banter helped her connect with the audience.

Her 2012 record Master of My Make Believe makes more sense live because Santigold gets to act out the different parts she’s established. She exudes femininity and is strong and powerful. Her outfits are outrageous and fun, and her SG1 background dancers fill the stage with props and casually precise choreography.

Santigold

Santigold’s live performance is decidedly “feminist” (can we find a more positive term for this), not only because she celebrates girl-power and female creativity. Her all-male backing band is figuratively emasculated in their outfits, which look like they work at Hot Dog on a Stick at the mall. The band’s outfit certainly works with the 80s-nouveau aesthetic overall, and it reminds you that this Santigold & SG1’s parade.

It’s Santigold’s SG1 dancers who provide a large portion of the entertainment value at Santigold’s live show. Without them, stronger lighting and video accompaniment would be necessary. But the SG1 dancers fill out the stage, and their style wreaks of post-ironic swagger, without a hint of a smile. They work with props like pom-poms, umbrellas, briefcases, and sledgehammers while performing backup singing duties at times. Their staged antics are highly entertaining, and their pantomiming performance alongside Santigold’s strong delivery harks back to Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton.

One of the highlights was when Santigold brought up selected super fans to dance to “Creator,” which is certainly an allusion to the viral video from Sasquatch 2009 that put her on the map after one person started a huge dance party on the lawn during “Unstoppable”. “Big Mouth” capped off the set with a nice peak, bookending the set with the opening and closing tracks from Master of My Make Believe.

The absence of “Look at These Hoes” as the most exciting and aggressive track on Santigold’s newest LP was a slight disappointment. The evening ended with a song that had the SG1 dancers showing off their “dirty south’ moves, showcasing their booties as the final prop.

After touring for more than a year, it would be easy to go through the motions, but White made her material feel fresh and far from stale in proving why she is So Damn Gold.

Setlist:
GO!
L.E.S. Artistes
Lights Out
Say Aha
Get It Up
Hold the Line (Major Lazer cover)
Disparate Youth
This Isn’t Our Parade
I’m a Lady
Anne
The Keepers
Creator
Freak Like Me
Starstruck
Brooklyn Go Hard (Jay-Z cover)
Shove It
Fame
Big Mouth

Encore:
Unstoppable
B-O-O-T-A-Y (Spank Rock cover)