Contact Festival 2017 Sinejan's Top 6

By Sinejan Ozaydemir

B.C Place hosted the Two-day Contact Festival this past week and we had the great opportunity to rave with the Vancouver crowd during the holidays! Here are my top performances of the festival:

1. Cash Cash

The most melodic, dance based set of the festival. Cash Cash chatted with the crowd during their whole set, encouraging them to get ready for the drops, get ready to jump and checking in with them to make sure they were enjoying the party. 

They played a lot of their originals but also did not disappoint us with the remixes played in between. A great range throughout the set, we did not get the opportunity to tune out. The anticipation of what’s coming up next was really there! The set was pure energy and joy with people head banging and dance walking with hands up all throughout the arena floor. The great use of lyrics up on the screen allowed the Vancouver crowd to have a taste of karaoke breaks amidst the dancing. Cash Cash’s flashing vividly colourful visuals which included their logos and cartoon style drawings of their faces were quite entertaining without taking away from the focus- the music. Cash Cash really shook up the room, jumping around the stage, chanting, waving flags and sharing their energy with us. They got the ladies up on shoulders creating a second group of dancing fans that were literally on another level. 

Fantastic energetic set with great music = my favourite of this two-day west coast party! 

Songs/remixes the crowd loved:

All my love (feat. Conor Maynard) – Cash Cash

Millionaire (feat. Nelly) – Cash Cash

Take me home (Feat. Bebe Rexha) – Cash Cash

Surrender – Cash Cash

Aftershock (Feat Jacquie) – Cash Cash

2. Armin Van Buuren

Great headliner, spreading the love and positive energy throughout his whole set. 

It was hard not to be aware of the reciprocal appreciation between the concert goers and Armin on night two of Contact. The ravers who had been enjoying a second full day of dancing did not slow down, and frankly, Armin would not let them! As soon as he started his set, we were all into the state of trance right away. Throughout his set, he encouraged the crowd to feel the moment and the love-he told us how much he was feeling the love and well, we couldn’t agree more! 

Besides the love fest between Vancity fans and Armin, the steady flashing of the light show dazzled, as we felt like we were in a European dance club rather than a big arena. He had great control of the music, especially accentuating with volume to really keep us on our toes. Armin’s fans excitedly reacted to his songs as they lost themselves in the moment. We raised our hands up and waved them around without restraint as the deep bass and flashing lights moved through our bodies and Armin reached out towards the crowd. All aspects of the huge stage were utilized with the use of an echo between the lasers and the main screen video, which fit in quite perfectly with the music. There was a great moment of suspense where he (almost) got us thinking the party may be over when an error message came up on the screen.

Happily the error message was followed by an awesome “test” of the systems on stage along to his track “This is a Test” which felt like a large scale version of the sound system check you would witness at the movies before a 3D movie in the big theatres with the surround sound. The ability to feel so in sync with each other as fans, made this set a great closing statement to the two-day festival. We were all there to have fun after all! 

Songs/remixes the crowd loved:

Adelante (Bobina Megadrive Remix) – Sash!

I live for that energy (Asot 800 Anthem) – Armin Van Buuren

You are (Asot 823) Armin Van Buuren and Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano

I need you (club mix) – Armin Van Buuren & Garibay Feat.  Olaf Blackwood

Heading up High (First state remix) – Armin Van Buuren feat. Kensington

3. Destructo

The stadium floor was already full and ready to continue the dance fest when Destructo took to the decks. Henry Fong did a great job of holding down the fort and keeping people moving until Destructo arrived. He started off the set with a “we made it!” and began the party. You could really tell that he was in fact very excited to get up there and perform for the crowd, his excitement and energy came through as he looked up, pointed across the crowd at groups of people dancing and jumped up on top of the DJ table several times during his set to jump around and be one with/closer the crowd.

“Let me see that Bass Face BC style!”: The “Bass face”s were in the house as they jumped and nodded along to his popular track. We also thoroughly enjoyed many other Destructro originals through some flawlessly smooth mixing.

His visuals were active and easily distinguishable from any other artist – I mean no one else had the bass melting off their face, only Destructo can do that! It seemed the crowd was in awe because every time he looked up they would react without being asked to! Just and overall great vibe in the room throughout the set. I dare you to try not to move to the beat at a Destructo concert – not possible.

Songs/remixes the crowd loved:

Bass Face – Destructo

Loaded – Yo Gotti

Catching Plays – Wax Motif, Pusha T, Starrah

Party Up – GTA Remix

4. Alan Walker

Great follow up to Ekali, Alan Walker really read the room well as his bright and unique visuals along to the great discography made this a set very enjoyable.

Stunning futuristic (at some points almost looking like a video game and at times almost apocalyptic looking) visuals included sections of music videos, lyric videos, artwork of a glowing globe/earth view from space, industrial scenes, geometric shapes (some exploding like fireworks up on the screen), as well as the AW logo in different colours. Not to mention sweeping lasers that were so well done that they looked like they were dancing along with the crowd rather than just flashing, when seen from the back of the stadium. Although he wears his mask, he did use the stage camera so everyone in the stadium could see his reaction to the music and feel like they are right next to him up in the booth. Large parts of the crowd were full of ravers excitedly dancing around, making way for each other all spread out across the floor. He also played a lot of his originals like many artists at the festival, but also included some popular remixes like (Sia’s move your body) with transitions that kept the crowd moving throughout the set. Great transitions and overall flow from slow to fast tracks throughout the whole set. His songs also allowed the crowd a great opportunity to sing along- we just couldn’t stop ourselves!

Songs/remixes the crowd loved:

Drop the Beat- DJ Kuba & Neitan ft. Nicci

Sing me to sleep- Alan Walker

Sia – Move your body (Alan Walker Remix)

Need you (Brillz&Trav Piper Remix)- Dillon Francis & NGHTMRE

Alone- Alan Walker

All falls down – Alan Walker

Faded- Alan Walker

5. Marshmello

“Everybody know me, Everybody know Marshmello”- Marshmello started off his set full of his originals with his song “Know me”. The day one headliner seemed to be ready to entertain the crowd as he stepped up to the decks. There were tons of Marshmellos in the crowd dressed in the classic Mashmello head and all in white. The Marshmello army clearly appreciated the originals that he played almost fully through (played most of each song). This was the moment they were waiting for all day and they gave it their all. I think that he was one of the artists that really delivered what the crowd was expecting which made him the perfect headliner for day one. His fans were also not disappointed by the visuals. I personally really enjoyed the visuals for “Wolves” and the bubble style lyrics he used for his song “Alone”. I think the familiarity of the songs and the cartoon-like visuals brought out the kid in all of us and it was a great pleasant set to close off day one of the festival.

Songs/remixes the crowd loved:

Know me - Marshmello

Congratulations (Bkaye X Telykast Remix) – Post Malone

Silence – Marshmello

Hello – Adele

Wolves – Marshmello

Alone – Marshmello

6. Tails

Tails’ set contained some well known top 40 tracks and a lot of great throwbacks.

Very cool, colourful visuals that had his logo and also, from time to time, incorporated the use of the stage camera set up on the FVDED stage which was amplified on the screen behind him.

He was very natural with the crowd and had great crowd engagement throughout the set. The crowd seemed to be enjoying starting off day 1 with his throwback remixes as well as Rap/RnB base of songs, Kanye seemed to be one of his go to artists, the crowd really reacted to the can’t tell me nothing remix.

The beautiful “aliens”/“spacewomen” of contact came in near the beginning of the set and excited any who happened to turn around (usually while dancing).

The vibe was chill but there was a lot of movement with the crowd slowly pouring in. It was a great opener to the FVDED stage. The design of the stage allowed the fans to get real close and have a clear view of Tails and engaged with him when he looked up. The lights were few in number but set up very well at the front of the stage and near the middle of the floor. When all were going at the same time, it really felt like you were possibly being abducted (which went along well with the whole theme of the festival).

All of the lights (Nitti Gritti Remix)- San Holo

Wolves- Kanye West

Murda- Snavs

Riot Call (Snuf Remix)- Quix

Honorable Mentions: 

Tchami - For letting his music speak and being able to keep the crowd moving without saying a word

Henry Fong - Starting day 2 off with a bang and holding down the fort for Destructo

Say My Name & Parker - For moving with us and engaging with the crowd non-stop 


Sinejan is Toronto's correspondent for EDM Canada. You can follow her on twitter: @Sinejantweets.

Read Ryan's Top 6 of Contact Festival 2017!

Contact Festival 2017 Ryan's Top 6

By Ryan Hayes

Contact 2017 was a festival interwoven with surprises, and upsets. I attempted to go to the event with an open mind, nonetheless I couldn't help head in to day one with a curated list of my favourite acts already picked out. By the end of day two however the majority of my preconceptions were proven false. Originally anticipating a day one blowout, four of my top six acts played during day two and the biggest letdown of Contact was formally a front runner for the festivals number one slot.

1. Cash Cash

Going in to Cash Cash I literally had no expectations—their set time was initially my planned food break. I knew I would recognize a handful of their tracks, but there wasn't a chance I could identify a single one by name. Despite my obvious disinterest I walked away a huge fan. Their set was energetic, accessible, fun, and packed full of catchy original productions. The duo never fell pray to the generic festival trope of dropping popular banger X right after announcing they were about to take the festival up a notch. Instead Cash Cash stuck to their arsenal of anthems (which I now know) including “Matches,” “Take Me Home,” and “All My Love.” Transition tracks were fun, light-hearted throwbacks the likes of Nelly's “Must Be The Money,” and Eiffel 65's “Blue.” I didn't leave to get food, and smiled the whole way through.

2. Rezz

Initially I was worried that Rezz would fall victim to the mountains of hype surrounding her rise; fortunately for all in attendance her set did not disappoint. Often her sound seems to be polarizing, with audiences either clambering for more or missing the party entirely. Luckily for Contact, Vancouver gets it. From the opening seconds “Relax” Mass Manipulation introduction edit I was transfixed. Slow, grinding, and oddly melodic—her hour on stage melted away in a mesmerizing daze. Selections from 2016's Somethings Wrong Here, and The Silence Is Deafening EP's including “Purple Gusher,” “Selector,” and “Edge” were standouts. But, it was “Diluted Brains” that really floored BC Place drowning a packed house under torrents of thick relentless bass. Rezz was at home on the big stage, and she surely left Contact with new fans. The Cult of Rezz is strong in BC.

3. Destructo

A coherent, well built set consisting predominantly of originals goes a long way. Much like Rezz, Destructo's set was a trip through a very specific soundscape, and the artistry that takes is always appreciated. With strong west coast G-House vibes Destructo took Contact through his aggressively laid back bass filled productions. From “Dare You 2 Move,” to “Catching Plays,” and “4 Real,” Destructo cruised through his set, spanning the breadth of his discography. Finishing with “Loaded,” his new single featuring Yo Gotti, Destructo left the stage easily elevating day two of Contact to an early high day one never attained.

4. Tchami

Having just come off a back to back tour with Malaa, Vancouver was treated to a very special set by Tchami. Not worrying about pandering to main stage pressures Tchami took his time and warmed up Vancouver with about thirty minutes of proper club music, keeping his heavy hitters for the second half of his set. Initially dropping tracks in line with “The Sermon,” Tchami worked his way towards a higher tempo, transitioning to,”Prophecy,” and “Summer 99,” vibes before delving into monster hits like “Promessess,” and “After Life.” His timing and progression were impeccable, solidifying day two of Contact as a platform for real dance music artists. Finishing with an extended cut of “Adieu” cleansed the audiences palate and was a perfect send off for his set.

5. Ekali/Alan Walker

There is one simple reason for the tie between Ekali and Alan Walker; of the entire festival these two sets felt most at home following one another. Ekali set the tone for Contact, filling the stadium early and eliciting a great reaction from the crowd, with his slow tempo, driving as it built a narrative. Alan Walker then took to the stage to knock down what Ekali had set up for him. Offering up a proper main stage set with loads of sing-along worthy originals. This was probably the most consistent two hours of both days of Contact.

6. Carnage

Let me start by prefacing Carnage spent most of his time on stage simply pumping his fists in the air and screaming nonsense into the microphone. His transitions were often awful, and sections of the set were borderline indistinguishable noise. That being said, I can't stop thinking about his set. He worked the crowd into a frenzy the likes of which I have never seen. From start to finish the entire stadium collectively lost their mind. After announcing that he was there to deliver “some loud ass obnoxious music,” that was exactly what he did. At times his set was nearly paint by numbers, but at other times it was genuinely surprising. It was jarring, abrasive, and arrogant—but that's what made it good? The crowd’s energy was infectious, and if you suspend all sense of musical taste, the set was loads of fun. Carnage left the stage with one final proclamation, “Contact 2017 RIP, I just murdered your ass.” I honestly don't know what to say...but I think he did?

Honourable Mention: Armin

Armin showcased the harder side of trance for his Contact audience, maybe because he was following up Carnage, or simply because he wanted to do something different. Either way, melodic trance is more my speed meaning this particular Armin set did not really sit well with me. Running through tracks like “If It Ain't Dutch,” and “You Are,” Armin dialed up the energy and hammered Contact. While it may have not been my style I recognize the artistry of a set expertly woven together. As always, Armin knows how to take on a main stage.

Biggest Disappointment: Marshmello

Because of the endless hype, my expectations for Marshmello were high, and sadly his set fell victim to over inflated promise. Keeping my disappointment in check, Marshmello did deliver about forty five minutes of music that plastered a smile on my face. He played his originals and that's what people wanted to hear. Outside of his trademark sound there was a lot that could have been trimmed from his set. It was evident that he was attempting to hype the audience up with a banger or two, but it was generic. It wasn't woven together particularly well, and it didn't fit the happy-mello persona I had come to know and love. Ultimately, for me, Marshmello fell short and left me wondering if his set was more suited for a one hour time slot.

Ryan Hayes is a Vancouver based writer who has contributed to many EDM publications over the past few years. You can follow him on Twitter: @VanCityDanceNrd.

Read Sinejan's top 6 of Contact Festival 2017! 

Win 2 festival passes to Contact Festival with Marshmello, Armin Van Buuren + more in Vancouver!

One of the biggest winter festivals in Canada is taking place in late December at B.C. Place in Vancouver. It's called Contact Festival and it's a 2-day event that features some of the biggest DJs in the world. From the top of the lineup that includes Marshmello and Armin Van Buuren to the bottom of the lineup like Ghastly and Mr. Carmack - Contact festival is absolutely stacked. 

EDM Canada has teamed up with Blueprint Events to offer a lucky winner 2 festival passes to Contact festival on December 26th and 27th in Vancouver. To enter, simply visit the EDM Canada Facebook page, find the video contest post, tag a friend in the comments, and you've entered! You can also get an extra entry if you share the video. The contest is open until Tuesday, December 12th. Enter now and good luck!

10 questions about WayHome Music & Arts Festival

In 2015 WayHome festival redefined the eastern Canadian festival landscape by offering up a 3-day multi-genre camping festival at Oro-Mendonte, just outside of Toronto. It was a success as 90% of festival goers had chosen to camp and overall attendance numbers have jumped a healthy 15% each year since its inception. Having recently won the "Best Major Music Festival" of the year award at Canadian Music Week, the buzz around WayHome is continually growing. With 35,000 fans expected to show up per day this summer, the 2017 edition of WayHome is shaping up to be its biggest year yet. 

Ryan Howes - Creative Director of Wayhome

EDM Canada had the chance to sit down with Ryan Howes, creative director of WayHome, during Canadian Music Week to discuss what makes WayHome special, its lineup, location, and much more. Enjoy. 

Can you give me a brief history of WayHome?

Ryan Howes: We're entering our third year of WayHome. The intention of when we launched WayHome was to offer a multi-genre camping festival in the Toronto market, which is top 3 in live music markets in North America. A proper multi-genre camping festival never existed in Toronto and we thought it was the right timing to launch. 

We had huge success in year 1, and it was a surprise that over 90% of the crowd actually camped. We've seen healthy growth year and year since. 

Can you reveal a bit more about the number of attendees, the growth, and how many do you expect to show up for the 2017 edition of WayHome?

We have 15% growth from 2015 to 2016, and we expect to see 35,000 fans a day in 2017.  

As the audience grows we also offer more genres. So we added more EDM and hip hop this year. WayHome is no longer strictly an indie rock focus like it was in year one. But if you're a real music fan, you're a fan of a number of genres and different artists. 

What makes WayHome special and different than other festivals?

I think one of the main differences is the setting that it takes place. The owner of WayHome also owns Burl's Creek so we got a lot of flexibility on what we can and can't do on the ground. It's a beautiful piece of property, a custom built festival site with internal roadways, fibre in the ground, and the cell + wifi coverage that is better than what you see at a stadium or hockey arena.

Having the location just off the highway, a kilometer off of Lake Simcoe, a few minutes away from cottage country, is special. Also the sunsets are absolutely amazing. We're surrounded by forests and trees everywhere. I think the setting is what makes WayHome what it is. 

This year you have invited a lot of electronic acts like Marshmello, Porter Robinson, Justice, Flume, and more. Would you agree that WayHome has embraced more electronic dance music in 2017 vs in previous years? Is it due to the growth or more to do with the future direction of WayHome?

Full lineup (Click to zoom)

It's definitely due to the growth. We want to offer more to a wider audience. It's also the way to industry is heading, like with Coachella you'd usually see a lot of indie rock acts headlining a lot of stages but this year you see Marshmello, Porter Robinson get some huge set times over the course of the weekend.

Adding electronic dance elements adds another layer of partying and enjoying the actual festival with friends. Louis the Child has a new EP out and they're going to be really big this summer and I think they are going to have an amazing set over that weekend. 

How did indie rock fans react to Bassnectar on the lineup from year one of the festival? 

At WayHome we have late night sets, and when we had Bassnectar on, we noticed that the vast majority of the crowd gravitated towards the electronic acts. 

With more electronic acts added to WayHome - will these acts get their own stage or will it be mixed?

Mixed. We always took the approach of putting various genres on each stage. We've done a really good job to make sure indie rock acts don't compete amongst each other, same goes for electronic acts. 

Is the lineup complete, or can we expect to hear more names?

Yes. 

On a personal level, name the act that you are most excited to see and why? 

There's a lot of amazing acts that you don't generally see in a festival environment. Pup is an amazing punk rock act from Ontario, and to see them perform at the Floor stage infront of 7,000 - 8,000 people will be pretty impressive. 

Justice hasn't really toured with a full on global touring package with sound and light in the past 5-6 years, so seeing them for the first time will be amazing. 

With the announcement of the cancellation of Mysteryland in the U.S. - What is your opinion on the overall health of the festival space in 2017 and beyond? Does the demand remain strong? 

WayHome wins best major music festival award at Canadian Music Week

There's definitely demand for festivals but festival producers must be strategic and smart on what they offer. Even with Insomniac, they canceled EDC New York last year, and are now concentrating more on the west coast. So now they're more regionally based vs. wanting to be in New York, Chicago, Orlando, and possibly somewhere in Canada. 

Festivals will be more regionally based and more about the boutique and niche. There's hundreds of electronic dance festivals in Europe but they're all geared towards a certain demographic and a certain sub-genre. I think that's what we'll start to see in North America. I don't thinks we'll be seeing 70,000 - 80,000 capacity festivals anymore, but more 15,000 - 30,000 capacity ones. 

For those that are interested in getting into the industry - what is your role as creative director? 

It takes 10-11 months to build a festival. As soon as WayHome 2016 was done, we started working on the 2017 edition 3-4 weeks later. I'm responsible for working with all of the departments, tying all of the pieces together. I make sure that the stage design, video content is all on brand. I have to make sure it ties into all of our sponsorship activations. I help design the site, food and beverage, VIP areas, curating the visual art stations, etc. I piece it all together to make sure it all belongs there once the fans show up at the festival. 

We have talent buyers that deal with booking the talent directly and I do work closely with them, and that takes a lot of time because there's a lot of back and forth negotiations. There are very long days, even working long hours in January/February.


WayHome Music & Arts festival takes place from July 28th until July 30th at Oro-Mendonte, just outside of Toronto. Tickets are still available - click here for more information

Listen to Marshmello's debut mix on Diplo & Friends

The mysterious producer known as Marshmello was showcased in a big way this past weekend by being invited to do an hour mix on Diplo & Friends BBC show. There is no doubt that Marshmello can produce fantastic tracks, but can he mix? Find out the answer below: 

Tracklist: 

marshmello – KnOw mE
Wave Racer – Streamers
Sevyn Streeter ft. Chris Brown – It Won’t Stop (Alizzz Remix)
Destiny’s Child – Say My Name (Cosmo’s Midnight Bootleg)
Foster The People – Best Friend (Wave Racer Remix)
marshmello – Pr0
Kastle ft. Lotti – Anything’s Possible (Sweater Beats Remix)
Grizzly Bear – Will Calls (Diplo Remix)
Basenji – Heirloom
Oh Wonder – Body Gold (Louis the Child Remix)
marshmello – WaVeZ
S -Type – Billboard (Lido Remix)
SBTRKT – Wildfire (OVO Remix) [feat. Drake]
Hermitude – HyperParadise (Flume Remix)
Jack Ü ft. Justin Bieber – Where Are Ü Now (marshmello remix)
marshmello – FinD Me
Galantis – Runaway (U & I) [Yacht Club. Remix]
Black Coast ft. M. Maggie – Trndsttr (Lucian Remix)
Big Sean – Marvin & Chardonnay (DJ Hoodboi & Trippy Turtle Remix)
marshmello – WroNg
The Weeknd – Often (Lido Remix)
Diplo – Revolution (AOBeats Flip)
Ryn Weaver – OctaHate (Rando Remix)
What So Not – The Quack (WSN Club Dub) 
marshmello – BLocKs
marshmello - ID
Trippy Turtle – Furthest Thing
Rihanna – Love Song (Dj Sliink Remix)
ILoveMakonnen – Club Goin Up On A Tuesday (Dj Snake Remix)
Avicii - Waiting For Love (marshmello Remix)
marshmello – WaNt U 2
Jack Ü ft. Kai – Mind
Dr. Dre – The Next Episode (San Holo Remix)
Rihanna – Rudeboy (AOBeats Flip)
Major Lazer – Lean On (feat. MØ & Dj Snake)
Major Lazer – Lean On (feat. MØ & Dj Snake) [Prince Fox Bootleg]
Zedd - Beautiful Now (marshmello Remix)