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The birth of our underground brand Factory 93 not only brought on an adrenaline rush reminiscent of the renegade warehouse era of raving—on which Insomniac was founded—but it also had us thinking back to all the people, places and parties that made this whole operation possible. And with that came a burning desire to crack open our collection and dust off the classic records we couldn’t live without. Through our From the Crate series, we’ll be breaking out both seminal and obscure cuts alike, imparting some knowledge in the process.

Midway through the 2008 Soulwax documentary Part of the Weekend Never Dies, there is a sequence where the filmmaker cleverly cuts between dozens of clips of the group’s principal players, Stephen and David Dewaele, DJing throughout the world. In each split-second shot, the live audio quality jumps from thunderously distorted to tinny and compressed, depending on the atmosphere of each gig that varies from towering festival stages to jam-packed sweatbox bars. Throughout the montage, the staccato beat remains constant—the heart-racing 16th note hiccup of a CDJ loop that slowly opens up to reveal the ass-shaking bass groove of the Gossip’s post-millennial indie classic “Standing in the Way of Control,” a song that dominated dancefloors throughout the middle of the decade in its “Soulwax Nite Version” form.

By the time Beth Ditto’s vocals begin, the audiences are seething—thousands sing along as she belts out the signature “Whoa-oh” lyrics. And when the chorus comes slamming down? It’s pure pandemonium, dance music at its most visceral and euphoric. Crashing cymbals and grinding bass mix with a feral blend of sweat, smoke and strobe lights so potent, you can’t help but squirm in your seat, transfixed by the YouTube player. It’s as if someone built a time machine and sent you back a decade, to the moment when the fissionable materials of electronic and indie music first began to generate the kinetic energy that would combust into EDM.

At the time, no one could predict such an explosion. Decimated by disinterest in the early aughts, dance music’s prognosis seemed grim. The electronica bubble had burst in the United States, under the weight of mainstream expectations and government interference. Even the mega clubs of Europe had waned, while worldwide, good old rock ‘n’ roll was getting another go-around, thanks to bands like the Strokes and the Killers—the latter of whom headlined Ultra Music Festival 2005 in the ultimate concession to dance music’s inability to sell tickets. But beneath the slick suits, tight denim, and thrift store dresses of bands like Interpol, Bloc Party, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs, beat the heart of millennials raised on raves—a 4/4 funk that even the scene’s most outspoken empresario, James Murphy, found after years spent standing in a dour punk posture.

The Gossip was another one of these bands, hailing from the almost forgotten Riot Grrl outpost of Olympia, Washington—a place that hadn’t made a blip on the cool-kid-radar since neighboring Seattle had given the world grunge. Ditto was a force of nature onstage, stripping down her plus-size body and wailing like a hipster Aretha Franklin, while guitarist Nathan “Brace Paine” Howdeshell and drummer Hannah Blilie bashed out tunes that blended raw blues riffs à la the White Stripes with groovy minimal beats straight out of ESG’s ‘80s basement tapes. Sure, their sound had soul, but as the moshing audiences indicated, you didn’t really dance to it.

“It was cool music to dance to, even while dance music was still uncool.”

Meanwhile in Ghent, Belgium, another urban area that hadn’t made a musical impact since the city’s gabber techno scene in the early ‘90s, the Dewaele brothers were busy making their own racket as Soulwax, a band that overtly referenced their rave roots (“E Talking,” anyone?) while still making what was fundamentally rock records out of live synthesizers and drums. The brothers came to worldwide attention in 2002 when they released a mix compilation, As Heard on Radio Soulwax, under the name 2ManyDJs. The CD had a seismic effect on the burgeoning mashup scene by beatmatching the Stooges into Salt-N-Pepa and Dolly Parton into Röyksopp. This new genre-free style of DJing was a hit with hipsters who were quickly tiring of electroclash’s brief monopolization of the dancefloor. It was cool music to dance to, even while dance music was still uncool.

The duo knew the gimmick wouldn’t last, and they continued to create their band’s own overdriven anthems, crafted more for concert stages than nightclubs. But every show had an after-party, so they began remixing seemingly every indie and dance punk act, from Ladytron to LCD Soundsystem, giving the original grooves the low-end weight needed to really push air out of the bass bins. This stylistic permutation was labeled “bloghouse,” and soon any MP3 containing a Soulwax remix was guaranteed to be played at the new generation of clubs that had cropped up, like Trash in London, Studio B in Brooklyn, and Cinespace in Los Angeles.

Soon these clubs became the main event, eclipsing tours like Daft Punk’s legendary Alive 2007 and Soulwax’s own grueling gig schedule. Why wait for Justice to come to town, when you could party to “We Are Your Friends” every night of the week—so long as someone plugged in their Serato. Just a few years after dance music’s so-called demise, it suddenly seemed like the scale had shifted back in the raver’s favor. The aesthetic would take longer to migrate into the new millennium, with tight band tees remaining the standard clubber’s wardrobe until dance music’s day-glo dress code caught up in the early 2010s. But the barrelling bass and screeching synths of Soulwax were the base ingredients to which folks like Skrillex and Diplo would add the drop, creating EDM in its purest form. And 10 years since the Dewaeles’ “Nite Versions” dragged hipsters onto the dancefloor, we’re still moving in front of the speakers.


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