Encore Beach Club At Night
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Event Info
Dillon Francis has already made a name for himself with his groundbreaking remixes, in-demand production mastery, and cutting-edge videos. Now, the artist/producer/remixer/DJ is about to release his long awaited debut album, Money Sucks, Friends Rule on Columbia Records. First recognized for helping to bring the tribal dance movement Moombahton to the forefront, he's scattered the dance music landscape with numerous influential EPs thus far, but it's the effervescent debut album that the music world has been patiently waiting for. Tracks include "Get Low" with DJ Snake, the anthemic "Love in the Middle of a Firefight" featuring Brendon Urie (from Panic! At The Disco), "When We Were Young" featuring Sultan + Ned Shepard VS Chain Gang of 1974, "We Make It Bounce" featuring Major Lazer & Stylo G, "Set Me Free" featuring producer/DJ Martin Garrix, and the gritty, mind-blowing "All That" featuring Twista and The Rejectz. Dillon's journey was full of pit-stops. First he attended art school, then he became a 'trainee' in a photography studio where he realized, "I didn't want to do that – I wanted to play and make music, kind of knowing I was going to have to 'make' the music I wanted to hear." After spending some time in Atlanta interning for Cory Enemy to get to know the dance music scene, he would move back to LA and hole up in the back house of his parents' place, getting to know his Ableton Live, 24/7. One story he relishes is his own personal revelation about Moombahton. "I was introduced to the artist Munchi because he had done a remix for Steve Starks on the same song ("Git 'Em") I did, except his was ten times better. I started scouring his SoundCloud, listening to everything. The tracks that were genre labeled "Moombahton" were the only tracks I couldn't figure out the tempo of by just listening to them," says Dillon. "So I started experimenting with my own productions." Later, Dillon would play a cut of his own for DJ Ruckus, who he was working for at the time, slowed down to 110 bpms. Ruckus loved the track ('Masta Blasta') so much, Dillon convinced his manager to send the track to Diplo. "And that was my break," he says.