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    Focus Presents: Pete Tong (BBC Radio 1)
    + Josh Billings, Nonfiction & Wobs
    Tuesday October 11th 2013

    Enter to win two free tickets here – Focus at The Yost Theater

    The Yost Theater Located @
    307 N Spurgeon St
    Santa Ana, CA 92701

    As a DJ, Pete has graced the decks of the best clubs and festivals worldwide. As a producer he has assembled the music for movie soundtracks such as The Beach, Human Traffic and 24 Hour Party People and has produced his own material under various guises.

    As an innovator, Pete has taken the world of Podcasts by storm and taking the #1 spot in the music podcasts download chart with the ‘Tongcast’. Pete has also produced the world’s first collection of TV-style music shows, aired weekly direct to mobile phones. And as an icon, Tong was the inspiration behind the film “It’s All Gone Pete Tong”.

    Last year saw Pete get into the studio and finally fulfil his dream of making his own music. He has recent collaborated with Chris Cox, James Talk, Paul Harris & Jay P and has an ambition to produce an artist and compose a film score in the future.

    Pete’s success as a broadcaster, clubland DJ and music industry tastemaker is his ability to create a balance between credibility and commerciality and it not afraid to drop the hits on the decks. “People forget it’s entertainment,” Pete explains. “I wouldn’t be doing this if I couldn’t champion new music, but a mix is the key. And it’s supposed to be fun.”

    The dance market has changed a lot since Pete started, but one thing remains the same, people still want to go out and have a good time. “People love music, make no mistake about that, whether and how they buy it right now is one thing, but people still want to party…it’s our job to come up with new parties, new nights, new venues, new themes to keep the scene fresh and exciting.” says Tong.

    In the meantime, the ever-active Pete still sees his vocation as he did when he started out, playing other people’s records to get an audience dancing. “We need to constantly remember why people want to come to clubs – which is simply to have a great time and feel the music.” With Tong behind the decks, there’s little worry of failure on that score.

    Pete Tong OfficialPete Tong Official Website
    Pete Tong Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/petetong
    Pete Tong SoundcloudPete Tong’s Spotlight page on SoundCloud – Hear the world

    More info on the clubFocus Tuesdays @ TAPAS Newport Beach – Orange County’s Number 1 House Club
    Purchase tickets / Monthly Membership
    Focus – Presale Tickets

    Download the mixes recorded live at the club
    Live At Focus – Live House Music recordings from Focus in Orange County

    I have added a country code to this thread, as this site has the largest proportion of users based in the UK, and its not immediately clear your event is in the USA.

    in spite of his fame in the UK especially during the late 1990s and his work for our national broadcaster (though he has worked in radio since the 1980s), its not that easy for him or any other “superclub” DJ to get a decent gig or venue as many superclubs have been downsized or closed down in the UK due to concerns over drug use. I don’t want to sound like I’m blaming the current generations of young Americans for this but their parents generation put a lot of pressure on the UK and Europe because we were seen as “too liberal” about the use of relatively harmless drugs.

    If they do play its often in the North of England rather than London. Also the reputation of the creative industries in the UK is including the BBC is currently worse than shit as they are viewed as a hideout for child molesters and money launderers.

    BTW that press release might be a bit old as I’m sure he was producing music many years ago. The phrase “its all gone Pete Tong” is from a British dialect known as Cockney Rhyming Slang which was popular in London until the 2000s (it has since increasingly been replaced by young people of all races trying to sound like a mixture of West Indian/African and American accents), and was in common use long before the movie was made, in the 90s often used in jest to refer to the very quick rise and fall of superclub culture. This is exactly what is being repeated currently in the USA currently with the rise of “EDM” some 20 years later.

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Forums Rave Parties US : CA: Focus Presents: Pete Tong (BBC Radio 1)