Electronic Beats Weekly

  • 31. End of Year Special: The Best and Worst of 2024

    29:55||Season 2, Ep. 31
    We're at the end of a wild and unpredictable year – and we're not just talking about club culture and electronic music. In this episode, our hosts Juba, Kikelomo, and Otto Kent run through the highlights and lowlights of 2024 in music and more. They cover some of their year's most memorable moments on dancefloors and on online, and what they're looking forward to leaving behind in 2025.Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Subscribe to our newsletter if you want more curated content from the Electronic Beats universe!Host: Juba & Kikelomo & Otto KentProducer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 30. When did visuals become bigger than the DJ – again? (with Cameron Cook)

    34:04||Season 2, Ep. 30
    Big DJ gigs with an intense lightshow and a strong focus on visuals have been there for a while – but it seems like they are having a new peak. With DJs like Anyma selling out the Sphere in Las Vegas, it sparks the question: Has it become more important how a show looks than how it sounds? In this episode, we are joined by cultural commentator and journalist Cameron Cook to talk about how visuals changed in the past years, what the trend is right now and how the future could look like. Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Subscribe to our newsletter if you want more curated content from the Electronic Beats universe!Host: OttO Kent & Juba Producer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 29. What the sound looks like: Interior and set design in club culture (with Arnold from KWIA)

    33:10||Season 2, Ep. 29
    Interior and set design have always been a part of dance music, with different parties and clubs creating spaces that amplify and enhance the sonic and social experience. But for every person turned on to techno by TikTok and craving Instagrammable visual moments, there's another who wants a raw warehouse and no-frills dancefloor. In this episode, we invited Arnold from KWIA – one of Berlin's coziest, most intentional spaces – to talk about the legacy of design in nightlife, and how different types of spaces can shape sounds and scenes.Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Here's the link to subscribe to our newsletter.Host: OttO Kent & Juba Producer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 28. How are we documenting dance music in 2024? (with Chloe Lula)

    34:40||Season 2, Ep. 28
    So much of nightlife and electronic music is ephemeral, enjoyed in the moment. But those nights and moments and sounds are simultaneously something we want to preserve – whether through is an exciting new online mix, blurry phone photos from our last night out, a heavy coffee table book, or even a museum. This week, Otto Kent and Juba are joined by Berlin-based DJ, producer and music journalist Chloe Lula. They talk about how electronic music is documented in 2024, what they want to see more of in the future, and why who gets to tell these stories is so important.Our newsletter is back! Subscribe here for a curated view on life, electronic music and everything in between. Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: OttO Kent & Juba Producer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 27. Is dance music truly a community? (with Cormac)

    31:54||Season 2, Ep. 27
    We live in a time of division and polarization. But when it comes to dance music and club culture, we like to think of them as a unified global community. How true is that, really? In this episode, Otto Kent and Juba are joined by Cormac, the DJ, Polari Records owner and host of the Queerly Beloved podcast. They dig into what exactly people mean when they talk about "community", and the shared values they perceive in dance music and club culture worldwide.Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: OttO Kent & Juba Producer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 26. What's club and dancefloor etiquette in 2024? (with Cassidy George)

    35:28||Season 2, Ep. 26
    We love to go out to clubs and have a good time with friends and strangers alike. But anytime you're on a crowded dancefloor, not everyone’s going to be on the same page when it comes to appropriate behavior. The way we all act and interact can make or break a night, but these expectations can also be hard to pin down, and vary widely depending on the city, scene, and personal preferences. In this episode, 032c editor Cassidy George joins Juba and Kikelomo to talk about the best dancefloor etiquette, their unwritten rules of clubbing, and the different trends affecting how people party in 2024. Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: Juba & KikelomoProducer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 25. How do we feel about posthumous albums? (with Christa Belle)

    36:20||Season 2, Ep. 25
    In September, the visionary electronic producer SOPHIE released what was promoted as her final album, three years after her tragic passing. And people had a lot of opinions on it – as they usually do with music that comes out after an artist's death, whether it's Tupac, Avicii, Lil Peep, DJ Rashad, Prince, or many, many others. There are moral and musical questions to consider. So this week, Kikelomo and Juba are joined by artist, curator and cultural commentator Christa Belle to talk through the complicated emotions posthumous releases inspire. Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: Juba & KikelomoProducer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 24. Can you copyright a rhythm? (with Oscar Atanga)

    32:50||Season 2, Ep. 24
    That's what the Jamaican production duo Steely & Clevie are trying to do, with an ongoing lawsuit claiming ownership of the so-called "dembow" riddim – the basis for reggaeton worldwide. It's one of the most significant music copyright cases of the last decades, with significant and widespread implications for both the mainstream music world and underground dance music. To discuss the questions and possibilities that the lawsuit raises, Kikelomo and Otto Kent are joined by Oscar Atanga, a resident of the African Acid is the Future collective and Refuge Worldwide Berlin.Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: OttO Kent & KikelomoWriters:: Aaron Gonsher & Merle VenzkeProducer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
  • 23. Have we reached peak DJ? (with Kikelomo & OttO Kent)

    32:12||Season 2, Ep. 23
    Clubs are closing all around the world, but it still seems like there are more DJs than ever before. Why do so many people want to be DJs – whether bedroom amateurs or touring professionals? And how does all the attention and effort affect the scene? In this episode, Otto Kent and Kikelomo explore the ongoing impact of the pandemic and social media on DJing, the musical, social, and financial motivations for becoming a DJ, and how much the culture can sustain this trend. Electronic Beats Weekly is a production by Telekom Electronic Beats and ACB Stories.Host: OttO Kent & KikelomoWriters:: Aaron Gonsher & Merle VenzkeProducer: Aaron GonsherEdit and Sound Design: Marc ÜbelLead Producer: Isabel Woop
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