Highlights from day one of FVDED In The Park (Review)

By Ryan Hayes

Another year of FVDED In The Park has come and gone. Although we were unfortunately only able to attend day one of this year's event there were still plenty of dance music highlights. The main difference at this year's addition was the massive overhaul to the Northwest stage: with literally double the production & a brand new tent structure. As almost every other major festival in the lower mainland has collapsed over the last few years FVDED continues to expand and at this point very little stands in its way as it strengthens its hold on Vancouver's festival market.

Although day one tended towards the rap side of FVDED's overall lineup attendees were treated a world class stretch of uninterrupted dance music. Four and a half straight hours of fantastic music by true dance music artists—Ookay, Duke Dumont, Kaskade, AC Slater, & Rezz. By the last drop I could safety say that the day's offerings more than justified the ticket price.

Keeping it a step above the rest, here are our day one highlights:

AC Slater

With one of the few sets running for eighty minutes AC Slater kept the people dancing from start to finish. Headlining a packed FVDED Lab—the audience was literally overflowing—with his unique blend of bass laden UK infused house music Slater kept the night's theme of all things house alive and well. In the past every stage at FVDED has drawn a different audience, however, this year was a unique experience. As the day progressed I slowly began to notice the same crowd gravitating from stage to stage following quality music. Everywhere I went the crowd travelled with me: there was the guy with a giant inflatable plastic straw, a girl and her boyfriend who had seen Kaskade six times, the crew with the full sized Night Bass flag, and a handful of others. Spending the time to create a truly immersive experience AC Slater's set started relatively calm and picked up speed and playfulness as the night progressed. It was by far the most cohesive set of day one

Kaskade

Lets start off by saying Kaskade was the real headliner of day one—Future may have been billed higher, but the night's energy reached its fever pitch during Kaskade's absolutely packed main stage set. It wasn't the most tight-knit Kaskade set I had ever seen, but the decision to play it fast and loose and just have fun seemed to be very conscious. Rolling through his melodic hits stitched together with dancing music anthems like Reload while working in a few pop mega hits like The Killer's Mr. Brightside insured that everyone left Kaskade's set with a big smile on their face. There was even a section near the end of his set, which he embarked on by playing his 2008 hit with Deadmau5 I Remember, where he took the tempo down and skirted around some redux vibes. Twenty thousand people singing and jumping in unison; forgetting their problems awash in a sea of euphoric energy. Isn't that what main stage festival dance music is all about? As always Kaskade was the gold standard.

Rezz

Without a shadow of a doubt no audience was more hyped for an act than the thousands of FVDED attendees who crammed themselves in to the Northwest tent to see Rezz. Having seen Rezz play BC Place I was worried this would seem small and anticlimactic by comparison, but each and every person in attendance at FVDED was a die hard Rezz fan. Every twist and every turn elicited a thunderous roar of approval from the audience. Cellphones high, everyone was ravenous to capture even a few seconds of new material. With Contact having taken place just over six months ago there was also the risk that Rezz' set would be too similar to her previous offering—that wasn't the case. With new productions from her upcoming album, Witching Hour & Hex, along with countless ID's Rezz somehow managed to sounds entirely fresh and surprising all over again. I am not sure how she does it but she continues to get better with every live set. Unequivocally Vancouver agreed.

Aside: Where Rap & Dance Meet

It is absolutely worth mentioning that Noodles early DJ set at the FVDED Lab represented the perfect blend of what FVDED In The Park is attempting to achieve as a festival. Rolling through Rap and R&B hits both old and new combined with heavier festival oriented bass heavy beats Noodles managed to meet everyone right in the middle. She drew in both sides of the festivals overall audience, and for that she deserves major credit.

Head of Blueprint discusses Squamish, FVDED, M.I.A. and much more in this exclusive interview

Alvaro Prol, the Co-Founder and Principal of Blueprint, the largest promoter in Western Canada, is a busy man. His company owns some of the hottest nightclubs in Vancouver and holds over 300 events a year. This year has been especially busy for Alvaro and Blueprint as they are planning their brand new FVDED In The Park at Holland Park, Surrey, B.C., managing their brand new underground club called M.I.A., renewed their involvement with the Squamish Music Festival, and much more. With a rock solid home base in Vancouver, Blueprint has expanded to Alberta in the past year and had a successful Northern Lights Festival with the 2nd night completely selling out. 

In this interview we discuss Blueprint's involvement with the Squamish Music Festival, their new FVDED In The Park festival, their latest club M.I.A., his views on the current festival scene and much more. Enjoy: 

Can you tell me a bit of history with Blueprint's involvement with the Squamish Music Festival?

Alvaro Prol: Squamish Festival is run by Brand.LIVE, who are partners with Live Nation. They've been at it for a long time and we have good relations with them both, especially since we're also partners with Live Nation. Last year they invited us to do our own stage, so we curate and book our own Blueprint stage and help with any other electronic acts that will play at the festival. We also help with marketing and promotion. But our big thing is to curate our own stage.

Besides the lineup, what will be different at Squamish this year versus last year?

I think every year you do an event you just get better at it. You fine tune the product, to make it more comfortable, to be better run logistically. I think Squamish has really come a long way, matured a ton, and has become the destination for Western Canada seeking a contemporary festival. 2015 will be the best year it's ever had and I'm just really excited about the lineup. I just think it's going to be a great even overall. The product and experience is just going to come up.

Before Blueprint's involvement in Squamish – were electronic artists booked at the festival?

Yes, those guys have always been dance music fans. There's always been a good touch of dance music at Squamish. But last year was the first time they've given it a dedicated stage. This year we've got a deeper lineup and we've also added Kaskade to one of the larger stages. We want to throw some of the dance guys onto the bigger stages and that's something that we'd like to explore for next year.

Your stage has a deep underground feel to it, just like last year's. Is that something Squamish wanted from Blueprint or it was Blueprint that wanted to bring that feel to the festival?

When you think about what kind of music you want to bring to a festival, what kind of vibe you want to bring, these guys who run Squamish trust me to do my thing. But we collaborate, we talk, we throw ideas around. Putting Odesza on to headline is something I targeted from the beginning because I feel like they're just a great act that's growing so much. Adventure Club is an act that we go way back with... Bringing acts like Gorgon City, Tchami, Kaytranada, Porter Robinson to the lineup - we feel like we have a diverse lineup filled with young talent. We also have up and coming acts like Peking Duck, and Slow Magic.

We have A-Trak, who is just a full on great DJ and a legend. We feel like that we have a good diverse lineup of guys and we really want them to stand out on their own. We're also bringing local favourites like The Funk Hunters, Mat The Alien – we always try to bring love to local talent.

Is the competition heating up in terms of festivals in B.C./Western Canada?

I think the festival market is growing globally, just not in Western Canada. Festivals have been big business in Europe for a long time, and I think North America has woken up to it a bit later. We're seeing different brands going into different markets. I think it's busy but we believe that festivals must have a localized connection, with the right idea and concept. There's a lot of noise happening with festivals globally, but that will fade out because I think people will have a rough time because it's a difficult business to be in. It's very difficult to fight for the talent with the amount of festivals that will be happening. Only the strong will survive long term, and it will only be about quality over quantity. Today there's a lot of quantity out there right now.

So you believe that in a few years there will only be a select few festivals that will remain at the top?

I think the strong will survive. You take a festival like Shambhala which has been around for a long time and have been always true to what they do. Stuff like that will always work. But when a promoter wants to put together a festival because they have a lot of money to spend on a lineup, that's okay. But that's not as important as a festival that commits to something like Squamish has. Squamish has a long term plan they have been building towards a festival that is being globally recognized.

Will Blueprint ever establish their own summer festival in Vancouver?

We have. We just started this year with Fvded In the Park.

You've expanded it this year. Last year it was only 1 day.

Last year it was a party, so we don't even look at the past for this event. This festival is something new to us and we're launching it as a new event. It will be a 2-day outdoor festival with 2 stages. We really see it as our summer event and we didn't want to do what everybody else is doing.

We didn't want to put together a festival that based off of social media numbers, but rather to put together a festival that felt like a party in the park. We wanted Fvded In The Park to be a little more accessible as we didn't want people paying $400 for a ticket to camp. It's more about jumping onto the Sky Train and checking out hip hop, RnB guys, and electronic acts. Fvded In The Park will happen on July 3-4th at Holland Park. That is our summer festival.

It will be a yearly event and the capacity is 22,000 a day. Being that this is the first one, we wanted to build it as big as possible and make it an awesome open format event. We wanted to open it up to fans of all kinds, not just dance music fans. I am a music lover of all kinds so I want to be able to see the Weeknd and see Deadmau5. I love them both. We want to get out of that bubble that Blueprint is “EDM” because we really are more than that. We are a very diverse company with an eclectic taste.

Fvded already had a great response from the community with strong sales, and we are very happy about it. I feel like in an environment where you have to pay a lot of money to go to Coachella, Squamish, or Pemberton – you also have the option to go to a park in Vancouver to party and then afterwards go to a nice restaurant and stay in a hotel. We're pumped about holding an urban festival. Money is tight out there and we want to make things more accessible to more people because it's difficult to get people to go to everything.

Do you think the Vancouver nightlife scene is in a good place?

I think Vancouver has always got a great scene. We have educated fans and they know their music. Things are growing, and within sub-genres we're seeing growth within the growth. Is every trance show selling out? No, but maybe they're into deep house or techno now. There's a lot of content out there right now and it's hard for a promoter to get that many acts through because there's too much.

But you're trying your best.

We do our best and we try to bring them to all of the clubs we operate, and we put on as many shows as we possibly can. We're busy as we have 120 acts coming through Vancouver in April.

M.I..A is your latest venture – do you aim for it to be the new hot underground spot in Vancouver?

We bought Shine some years ago, and when we bought it we knew it needed renovation. But we wanted to operate it ourselves, feel it out, and see all of the little corners and things that needed to be different to make the space better. Shine is situated on a legendary corner of Vancouver, at Water and Cordova, an iconic corner of the town. It's also just below our offices as we're on the top floor.

So we took our time designing the concept of this club and I'm really happy at the way it turned out. We gutted the whole place, started from scratch, got rid of the entrance as you now have to enter it from the back in a tunnel that opens up to a lush high-end room. It has a crazy funktion one sound system and it sounds like you have headphones on. We put this L.E.D. install all across the whole club that look like lines that cut across the entire space. It's turned into one of our favourite clubs that we own right now.

It's in intimate club so our thing here is that we’re encouraging people not to use their phones to take pictures or have photographers. So when you're there, you feel that intimate vibe. You feel like you're at this amazing house party where you don't want to pull out your phone because you'd be a jerk. I'm stoked and I just want to hang out there all of the time. I can't wait to see what kind of music that will flourish in that type of room. I feel like it will be a nice little cultural hub in the city.

Did you try to model M.I.A. based on famous underground clubs like Berghain or Verboten?

There were inspirations but I didn't want it to feel like you're in a techno club on the weekends. I want it to feel like you're a techno head grown up that knows all kinds of music, where you might hear some techno but you also might hear a Drake track. It doesn't matter because you're at such a cool party. We're not trying to pigeonhole ourselves into an underground sound but instead give them a sense that you're in a club that gives you a different vibe. We want people that get music, are cultural, and are underground in a sense that they can roll with anything.

Does M.I.A cater to VIPs with table/bottle service?

Yeah we have all that. Shine was a very uncomfortable nightclub, so what we did was add seating everywhere. When we organize an underground night everybody knows that they can sit wherever they want. But if groups want to take sections and lock it down, we provide that service.

Blueprint was busy expanding to Alberta by bringing two promoting groups into your fold – how's that transition been going?

It's been great to go to a new market. I think Albertans have been really receptive of Blueprint the brand. Every time we do a show we sell out of merch as people are buying hats and tank tops. It's been a really really great welcoming feeling from the people of Alberta. We want nothing more than to continue by giving back and growing organically. It's definitely working out that way.

We just did Northern Lights in Edmonton and Saturday was sold out, which was great. We first started arena shows with Arrival, then we did Get Together, and now with Northern Lights. Things are going well. We're slow and steady, just like what we did here. We want to continue to build it and build it right. We want to give people good experiences at a good value. We want people to know that what we're putting out in Edmonton is just as good as what we're putting out in Vancouver. We are continuing the build the business and the family across Western Canada.

Are there any other big plans set for Alberta?

The most important message I want to get across is that we're trying to build the business properly by giving them the best product that we can.

Is Blueprint happy with just the west coast, have you ever considered expanding further East?

No. We have a great relationship with the Ink guys in Toronto and other people out in the east. We are as busy as we could be and happy where we are. We have no plans in going past where we are now.

Anything else you'd like to announce?

We have our 18 year anniversary coming up this year. The Mad Decent Block Party and Life In Color are coming in September. Contact is going up in capacity this year and it's going to be bigger than it has ever been. We sold 14,000 tickets a day last year.


My thanks to Alvaro Prol for this interview. 

FVDED In The Park will take place from July 3rd until July 4th at Holland Park, Surrey B.C. -  just minutes away from downtown Vancouver. If you want to grab tickets - click here

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Squamish Valley Music Festival will take place from August 7th until August 9th at the Centennial Fields. If you want to grab tickets - click here

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If you live in Vancouver and want to check out what Blueprint is planning, then click here to check out the Vancouver calendar.