YouTube’s First-Ever Music Awards Show
What:
The YouTube Music Awards
When:
Sunday November 3, 2013
Where:
Live from Pier 36 – New York, New York w/ additional feeds from Rio de Janeiro, Seoul, Moscow and London.
Hosted by Jason Schwartzman and Reggie Watts • Directed by Spike Jonze
With performances by Eminem, Lady Gaga, Avicii, MIA, Arcade Fire, Tyler the Creator and YouTube’s biggest stars.
Categories:
The YouTube Music Awards categories include video of the year, artist of the year, phenomenon of the year and more:
The nominees were selected by using YouTube data from the last year based on views, likes, shares, comments and subscriptions.
Check out the Official YouTube Music Awards Nominee Playlists and cast your vote!
The Biggest Battle
Clearly the biggest question is who will win the YouTube Phenomenon category… Gangnam Style or Harlem Shake? Both were massive hits amongst the ADD generation (yes, that’s you). Both caused people to do awesome dances all the time, everywhere. It’s a tough one for sure.
The Stats
Gangnam Style
Uploaded 7/15/12
A YouTube Record 1.8+ billion views as of 10/28/13 – that’s double 2nd place (Justin Bieber ft. Ludacris – Baby).
The crazy thing is that 1.8 billion reflects only the official video. With everything else combined it’s gotta be pushing 3,000,000,000. That’s a lot of views…
Harlem Shake
Uploaded 8/23/12
First Parody Video 2/2/13
It’s hard to determine when the first Harlem Shake parody video was made, but many believe it to be the one called “DO THE HARLEM SHAKE” with the guys in the pink, alien and red power ranger suits and the one with the sumo mask.
Since them a ton of famous people (The Miami Heat, Paul van Dyk, the cast of Sports Centre, Anderson Cooper, T-Pain, Jeff Gordon, and Jimmy Fallon, to name a few) have put up videos. And countless more.
Because of the Harlem’s Shake’s insane viral behavior, Billboard ended up announcing it would use YouTube stats to determine it’s Hot 100 chart, placing Baauer at the top of the list for several weeks. Here are some crazy Harlem Shake video stats.
The Biggest Controversy
Tyler the Creator (yes, one of the awards show’s performers) as well as LA cool guy Flying Lotus have both been outspoken critics of the social media platform’s category nominees. They have some pretty justified arguments, albeit via ranting tweets, about the same old pop acts being nominated, likening the show to the MTV VMAs.
It’s sort of true when you think about it. Sure the Obama vs. Romney rap battle video is nominated, but so are Lady Gaga and One Republic songs. The argument is that YouTube should be rewarding the little guy who makes original, innovative content, and leave the VMA stuff for MTV.
You can read more about Tyler and FL’s disdain via the LA Times.
For us the obvious concern is… YouTube is a video channel, not a music channel…
Needless to say, the YouTube Music Awards marks something truly amazing for the media and entertainment worlds. Social, traditional, music, film, it all comes together in an awards show determined by now many times people click play.
Krewella, Seven Lions, Candyland – 11.2.13 Glow at Echostage
Krewella
Seven Lions
Candyland
Des McMahon
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Doors at 9PM. No dress code. Ages 18+
Bottle Service: tables@echostage.com • 202.503.2330
Echostage • 2135 Queens Chapel Road NE • Washington, DC

On the heels of a massive DC debut at #MegaGlow, Krewella are back for their sophomore appearance for Glow at Echostage. The rockstar-EDM bass trio are on their boldest mission yet, the ‘Get Wet Live’ Tour promoting their latest album.
Joining the krew is Seven Lions, who’s melodic dubstep remixes of Above & Beyond and Tritonal make even the snobbiest trance fan respect bass music. His EP on OWSLA was ridic. Also on tour are co-ed Cali duo Candyland, who won back to back Beatport remix contests (Skrillex, Bingo Players) and then racked up over 4M plays on SoundCloud. Their debut album crushed Beatport across the board. Opening duties belong to Des McMahon, whose remix of Major Lazer – Jessica was recently premiered on Diplo & Friends
Nightmare on F Street: 11.2.13 at Ultrabar
Panorama Productions and Ultrabar Present:
Nightmare on F Street
DC’s Wildest Costume Party
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Ultrabar • 911 F Street NW • Washington, DC
On Halloween weekend, you’re invited to bust out the monster mash and dress up like you’re going to a graveyard smash! Or you can dress up sexy! No one’s going to judge you .. it’s HALLOWEEN!!
Last year’s Halloween party was absolutely insane and this year it’s going to be even wilder! Even the Ultrabar staff gets in on the action: bartenders, bouncers, managers, DJs, busboys, and VIP hosts…everyone gets dressed up!
- 5 Levels, 4 DJs spinning Top 40, House and International
- $150 bottles of Stoli
- Bottle service available at (202) 271 1171
- $4 Dos Equis, $6 Rum & Coke, $6 Sex on the Beach Shooters
- Ages 18+ w/ valid ID
- Dressy Casual
Music Format:
– Main Floor: DJ Saam (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
– Vault: DJ George (House, Dance, International)
– Bedroom: DJ Suelto (S. American + International)
– Chroma: DJ Geometrix (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
Tricks & Treats: 11/1/13 at Barcode
Panorama Productions and Barcode Present:
Tricks & Treats
Doors at 10PM. Ages 21+
For bottle service call (202) 271.1171
Barcode • 1101 17th Street NW • Washington, DC
No need to go trick or treating to make yourself feel like a kid again. We’ll be providing the tricks and something good to eat at Barcode Restaurant & Lounge on Friday November 1st.
Young Professionals have found a home on Fridays in DC at the clean, comfortable Barcöde.
Barcöde is what you make it. A low key evening on the patio, a wild one on the dance floor or a night of drinking with the boys.
A no cover policy promotes a relaxing vibe in a modern setting. DJ Saam blends the freshest mashups, popular hip-hop and house music.
Inside:
- 39 types of beer (12 on tap)
- 12 specialty cocktails
- Extensive wine & champagne menu
- Kitchen until midnight
- Dance/Top 40 hits
- (2) 72″ Projectors
- (10) 40″ HDTVs
- Color-changing marble, LED walls
Outside:
- Heated Patio
- Removable indoor/outdoor walls
- $150 Bottles of Stoli
- $5 Guiness
- $3 PBR
- Hookah
Young Professionals have found a home on Fridays in DC at the clean, comfortable Barcöde.
Barcode is what you make it. A low key evening on the patio, a wild one on the dance floor or a night of drinking with the boys.
DJ Saam blends the freshest mashups, popular hip-hop and house music.
Passion Pit: 10/31/13 at Echostage
I.M.P. Presents:
Passion Pit
The Joy Formidable
Tickets On Sale Now
Thursday, October 31, 2013 – Doors 6:30pm | Show 8:00pm
Echostage • 2135 Queens Chapel Rd NE • Washington, DC
Tables Available – 202.503.2331
Passion Pit – Gossamer
Michael Angelakos – vocals, keyboards
Ian Hultquist – keyboards, guitar
Xander Singh – synthesizers, samplers
Jeff Apruzzese – bass, synthesizers
Nathan Donmoyer – drums
* * * * *
Getting to Where We Belong: The Making of Passion Pit’s Gossamer
“Hideaway”
Hundreds of hipsters, college kids and music biz schmoozers gather under a massive white tent to see Passion Pit. It is an afternoon shindig hosted by the blog Brooklyn Vegan, at the 2009 South by Southwest festival. The sun is setting and it is a classic make-it-or-break-it moment for Passion Pit, who is headlining despite having just released a lone EP, Chunk of Change. The crowd is giddy on both free Izze fruit soda and the Boston band’s bubbly pop. Between songs, frontman Michael Angelakos runs his fingers and sweat through his thick, curly, Greek hair. He starts to rant—about a shirt he bought for his new girlfriend, about veganism, about inane blog comments. After a few awkward minutes, the music kicks back in. By the end of the performance, Michael is rolling on a red Persian rug amongst many, many keyboard and effects pedal cables, clutching his microphone, wailing in his signature helium falsetto. The audience cheers, the Tweeters tweet, the bloggers blog ecstatically.
Michael leaves the stage and begins crying. He has made it, and he has broken.
When the festival ends, the rest of the Passion Pit guys van back to Massachusetts. Michael stays behind in Texas. He calls a friend for support and begs her to come be with him. In a panic, he buys her a plane ticket. It is for the wrong year, 2010. He calls his parents in Buffalo, New York. “I’m going to a hospital,” he tells them.
Michael is standing with his father outside a hospital in Houston, looking at mock-ups of album artwork on his cellphone. Passion Pit has just signed to Columbia Records, and a debut album, Manners, is due in a couple months. The record cover is green and messy and murky. Michael is not crazy about it, but there is no time, as the hospital is about to take his phone away from him. “It looks fine, Michael,” his dad says. “Just go.”
In the hospital, Michael is not allowed to talk about work. “Up there, onstage, you’re alone, darling, ” a nurse tells him. “And if your life evolves into ruin, everyone will watch what you’re doing.” Michael thinks these would make good lyrics. His friends smuggle in positive reviews of Manners. When one magazine blesses the record with an 8 out of ten, he almost cries again.
——————-
“I’ll Be Alright”
This first sentence was not always the first. Originally, I was going to start with a simile: Michael Angelakos’ brain is like a shaken can of spray paint with no nozzle. Millions of particles of bright ideas bounce around in there. When inspiration punctures his head, art sprays out. Often, someone else must puncture the can, or smash it. Only, if you hold Michael’s bursting skull up to a canvas, you would not get a cloudy splatter of dripping bits. The paint would land perfectly in a detailed map of the knotty Tokyo subway system.
You can hear this “I’ll Be Alright,” the second song on Gossamer, in which a sudden seizure of skittering programmed drums swarms over diced synths. “My brain is racing and I feel like I’ll explode!” Michael sings amidst the orchestral glitch. He compares it to the sensation you feel after an orgasm.
Writing about creativity is like architecturing about dance. When I sat down to describe Michael’s thought process, a can of paint formed in my mind for whatever reason. After that, I thought no nozzle, because I like the alliteration. Then I tacked on a subject and verb. I start with a phrase, an image or a rhythm of words and construct around it. I’m not a beginning-to-end sentence builder. Michael asked me to write this piece because he intuited, correctly, that my writing is akin to his song crafting.
A spark of a Passion Pit song might be found in the fuzz of a guitar pedal. It might be a stumbled-upon drum loop, the tintinnabulation of layered chimes or some gibberish harmony he’s humming. It might be one of the 200 scratch melodies Michael has stored on his iPhone. Later, Michael might sit at a keyboard and work out a melody. “I do things backwards,” he admits, “and I’m a maximalist.” Indeed. The songs on Gossamer carry anywhere from 60 to 200 instrumental tracks, according to Michael. If you ask Alex Aldi, Michael’s engineer, they number 80 to 120. (The maximum output on their version of ProTools is 120 tracks.) Whatever, it’s a fuckton. But it’s important to talk to Alex.
——————-
“Constant Conversations”
When Alex and Michael set forth to record Gossamer in January of 2011, the two first rented a studio near the Manhattan Bridge in Brooklyn’s DUMBO neighborhood. Well, it was technically an office space. The new Passion Pit headquarters shared the building with digital media start-ups, dot.coms, that sort of thing, which were not appreciative of gut-rumbling bass bumps rattling the uninsulated walls.
“We’d blast these huge R. Kelly–like booms,” Michael says. “There would be fists pounding the walls,” Alex remembers.
The duo began working from 6PM to 6AM, partly to avoid pissing off the neighbors, partly because Michael is “really OCD about who’s hearing me” In the wee hours, Michael would toil at his array of keyboards, sequencers and computers.
The fruit of this first stage is the stunning slow jam “Constant Conversations.” It’s the kind of stank-faced, flesh-slapping R&B groove that makes a name like “Passion Pit” sound positively filthy. That is, until you pay attention to the lyrics. They are not nocturnal; they are dark. “I’m drunker than before / They told me drinking doesn’t make me nice,” Michael sings. “Well, you’re standing in the kitchen and you’re pouring out my drink.”
It’s important to pay attention to the lyrics.
——————-
“Slip-ups in this town are like a sentence to life.” –“Mirrored Sea”
What makes Southern California’s orange sherbet sunsets so gorgeous? It’s the life-strangling smog. Toxic clouds can sometimes lead to beauty.
In June of 2011, Michael headed to L.A. to continue work on Gossamer with a variety of big name producers. One producer would bring in pretty girls to sit on a couch in the studio. He would play back tracks at top volume. If the girls got up and danced, it was a hit.
Michael slept in another studio beneath the control room, where he could hear some dude fucking people’s brains out all night. The walls were marble.
Michael slept where Fiona Apple once slept. Michael recorded in a fancy house outside of which photographers snapped models in lingerie. Michael worked with a prominent hip-hop producer. They tinkered with “Hideaway,” an upbeat tune set to a speech a nurse once gave him. Michael played the hip-hop producer his demo. “You don’t need anyone to produce you,” the producer humbly admitted. Michael flew back to Brooklyn, ending what he now calls his “June gloom.”
“Everyone let’s me make these mistakes,” Michael says.
——————-
“Carried Away”
“He plays music so loud in his headphones, I can hear everything he’s doing. When he’s working, he won’t get up to use the bathroom or to take a sip of water. Watching him is watching someone in their element, someone doing what they were born to do. But it can be a waiting game for him to get an idea. Then, bam, ninety minutes later there’s this amazing finished song. He does stuff on the fly. Michael thrives on that, the immediate pressure. Everyone else game-plans. The game-plan is in Michael’s head and he’s twenty steps ahead. Conveying that is difficult. It’s information overload.’” — engineer Alex Aldi
——————-
“It’s Not My Fault, I’m Happy”
Aside from the sarcastic “Love Is Greed,” all the songs on Gossamer are one-hundred-percent true. I know this because I’ve compared the lyric sheet to a 3,672 word life story Michael emailed me. It begins, “A main talking point seems to be about the fact that there is a dichotomy in my music.” It ends with, “The next day I quit drinking.” I read it one evening while listening to “It’s Not My Fault I’m Happy” repeatedly as tears welled in my eyes.
Unlike some songwriters, Michael does not write in character. He compares the album to a collection of John Cheever stories. “It’s non-fiction, but dramatized. It’s euphoric pain,” he tells me.
The record is more intimate than that. Listening and reading along, I feel as if I am reading his chart. I am eavesdropping. I am putting him inside one of the TSA’s full-body millimeter wave scanners.
Ah, I think, “Take A Walk” must be about his father and his father’s father, his Papou, who sold old roses and owned a candy kitchen, using his savings to bring his village to America.
Hearing the celestas and xylophones skittering about the opening of “Love Is Greed,” I envision bolts of blue electricity flashing across Michael’s grey matter. The systolic, panicked pulse of “Mirrored Sea” is awash in adrenaline and amphetamine salts. The pomp and silver twinkle of “On My Way” is confetti for a forthcoming wedding.
“Are you sure you want to be this open,” Alex asked when he first heard the lyrics.
“This music is so on point with myself, I don’t know that I could do it any other way,” Michael replied.
Yes, Michael’s music juxtaposes dark subject matter and ebullient pop. It is at once escape and reality. It is also consciously androgynous. In the past, this was suitably captured with Michael’s falsetto. Now the unisexuality is enhanced by Erato, a female Swedish a cappella trio, two brunettes and one blonde, who went viral with a performance of Robyn’s “Call Your Girlfriend” on empty yogurt cups. Michael likes the idea of us not being able to discern if he or they are singing in certain parts. This is not duality or dichotomy. This is depth and honesty. Human beings are emotional, messy and murky creatures.
——————-
“On My Way”
It is a misconception that Manners was written for a girl. It was a record about Michael. Gossamer was written for a couple. “It’s an album about making an album that’s straining the relationship that’s helping you make that album. But say it better than that,” he tells me.
Kristy is an editor for a prominent food website. Her face appears throughout the Gossamer artwork. The back cover is a letter Michael wrote to her. He proposes to her in the chorus of “On My Way.” Originally the tune was called “Ballerina.”
“Just believe in me Kristina,” he sings. “All these demons, I can beat ’em.”
——————-
“Where We Belong”
Upon returning to Brooklyn from California, Michael reconnected with producer Chris Zane, who helmed Manners. Here is a sporting analogy, hockey specifically, according to Michael:
“Chris is the general manager and Alex is the coach. Without Chris I wouldn’t have been able to do this record. Without Alex I wouldn’t have been able to do anything.”
Alex is ten years Michael’s senior, Chris a little older. Michaels refers to them as his older brother and his older, older brother. The trio hunkered down in Gigantic Studios and started over on Gossamer as a mild winter fell upon New York. Michael admits he will often redo songs “like thirteen times. It’s one of my worst habits.”
Manners was largely built on three keyboards. There was a conscious effort this time to avoid the same process, to use more organic ingredients. Composer Nico Muhly dropped in, dueling pianos with Michael on “Love Is Greed” and arranging strings. That being said, there were still dozens of keyboards, walls of keyboards, “some Herbie Hancock shit.” Yamahas, Moogs, Arps, MS-20s, SH-101s, Junos, Prophets, a Japanese piano. They flipped over a couch in the control room to stuff in even more keyboards. Ask Michael to explain the differences between these many keyboards and he synesthetically describes it by texture: “One is felt, one is 100% cotton, one is tweed…” Alex would watch and listen in a busted La-Z-Boy recliner permanently stuck in the recumbent position.
“I did a calculation of the time I spent on this record. It was 4% of my life,” Alex tells me. He has recently heard the finished record. We chat about the sequence of the songs and debate the decision to cut a string section that originally opened the album. “It dawned on me this morning” he says. “After having a best friend for thirteen months, Michael is gone. I’m like, what the fuck do I do now?”
When I hang up, I must immediately play Gossamer again.
Written by, Brent DiCrescenzo
Carnival: 10.26.13 at Ultrabar
Panorama Productions and Ultrabar Present:
Carnival
DC’s Wildest Mardi Gras-Style Club Night
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Ultrabar • 911 F Street NW • Washington, DC
Drawing inspiration from the biggest party in the world, Panorama and Ultrabar fuse elements of the Brazilian, Portuguese and Caribbean Carnivals as well as New Orleans Mardi Gras into one massive event.
With free party favors, balloon drops, confetti blasts and live performers, Carnival at Ultrabar is DC nightlife’s escape to the no-holds-barred party world.
- 5 Levels, 4 DJs spinning Top 40, House and International
- $150 bottles of Stoli
- Bottle service available at (202) 271 1171
- $4 Dos Equis, $6 Rum & Coke, $6 Sex on the Beach Shooters
- Ages 18+ w/ valid ID
- Dressy Casual
Music Format:
– Main Floor: DJ Saam (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
– Vault: DJ George (House, Dance, International)
– Bedroom: DJ Suelto (S. American + International)
– Chroma: DJ Geometrix (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
Champagne Wars: 11.9.13 at Ultrabar
Panorama Productions and Ultrabar Present:
Champagne Wars
May the Bottle be With You
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Ultrabar • 911 F Street NW • Washington, DC

This Saturday at Ultrabar gets a little more interesting! We’ve got some absolutely insane Champagne specials so get your closest friends or random acquaintances and pop some bottles!
Every table booked in advance will receive a FREE bottle of Champagne on us.
Groups of 6 girls or more (21+) will also receive a free bottle of Champagne on us ( Must be booked in advance)
Email us at
tables@dcclubbing.com/wordpress2
- 5 Levels, 4 DJs spinning Top 40, House and International
- $150 bottles of Stoli
- Bottle service available at (202) 271 1171
- $4 Dos Equis, $6 Rum & Coke, $6 Sex on the Beach Shooters
- Ages 18+ w/ valid ID
- Dressy Casual
Music Format:
– Main Floor: DJ Saam (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
– Vault: DJ George (House, Dance, International)
– Bedroom: DJ Suelto (S. American + International)
– Chroma: Usman & Simo (Top 40, Mashups, Hip Hop)
Think Pink: 10/25/13 at Barcode
Panorama Productions and Barcode Present:
Think Pink – Breast Cancer Awareness & Charity Event
Doors at 10PM. Ages 21+
For bottle service call (202) 271.1171
Barcode • 1101 17th Street NW • Washington, DC
Party for the cure! #thinkpink

As October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we will be donating door and bar proceeds to the Susan G. Komen Foundation for breast cancer research. Come out to Barcode Friday night and honor someone who has been affected by breast cancer.
#ThinkPink
Young Professionals have found a home on Fridays in DC at the clean, comfortable Barcöde.
Barcöde is what you make it. A low key evening on the patio, a wild one on the dance floor or a night of drinking with the boys.
A no cover policy promotes a relaxing vibe in a modern setting. DJ Saam blends the freshest mashups, popular hip-hop and house music.
Inside:
- 39 types of beer (12 on tap)
- 12 specialty cocktails
- Extensive wine & champagne menu
- Kitchen until midnight
- Dance/Top 40 hits
- (2) 72″ Projectors
- (10) 40″ HDTVs
- Color-changing marble, LED walls
Outside:
- Heated Patio
- Removable indoor/outdoor walls
- $150 Bottles of Stoli
- $5 Guiness
- $3 PBR
- Hookah
Young Professionals have found a home on Fridays in DC at the clean, comfortable Barcöde.
Barcode is what you make it. A low key evening on the patio, a wild one on the dance floor or a night of drinking with the boys.
DJ Saam blends the freshest mashups, popular hip-hop and house music.
Masquerade Affair: 10/19/13 at Ultrabar
Panorama Productions and Ultrabar Present:
Masquerade Party
Saturday October 19, 2013
Ultrabar • 911 F Street NW • Washington, DC

Everything is more fun with a little mystery so we’re throwing a Masquerade ball this Saturday at Ultrabar!
We’re providing the masks and beads for you to get in the spirit and have a bit of semi-anonymous fun. Who are you dancing with? Who knows? Who cares? It’s all about the fun of the night.
- 6 Bars, 5 Levels, 4 DJs spinning Top 40, House and International
- $150 bottles of Stoli (Plus Free Bottle of Sex on the Beach shooters with every advanced table reservation!)
- Bottle service available at (202) 271 1171
- Ages 18+ w/ valid ID
- Dressy Casual
Think Pink: 10/18/13 at Barcode
Panorama Productions and Barcode Present:
Think Pink – Breast Cancer Awareness & Charity Event
Friday, October 18, 2013
Barcode • 1101 12th NW • Washington, DC
As October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we will be donating door and bar proceeds to the Susan G. Komen Foundation for breast cancer research. Come out to Barcode this Friday night and honor someone who has been affected by breast cancer.
Inside:
- 39 types of beer (12 on tap)
- 12 specialty cocktails
- Extensive wine & champagne menu
- Kitchen until midnight
- Dance/Top 40 hits
- (2) 72″ Projectors
- (10) 40″ HDTVs
- Color-changing marble, LED walls
Outside:
- Heated Patio
- Removable indoor/outdoor walls
- $150 Bottles of Stoli
- $5 Guiness
- $3 PBR
- Hookah
Young Professionals have found a home onFridays in DC at the clean, comfortable Barcöde.
Barcode is what you make it. A low key evening on the patio, a wild one on the dance floor or a night of drinking with the boys.
DJ Saam blends the freshest mashups, popular hip-hop and house music.








