Ahh, techno. It's noisy, joyful, body-centric, and wonderful in many ways... but it can also be pretty awful when it comes to gender. Ask DJ Mag's Top 100 DJs why there are so few women on the list in 2015 and you'll read a pile of convoluted manboy garbage, full of cringe-inducing quotes such as "guys get way more into this stuff than girls."
A tumblr called "Very male lineups" shows that the problem is invasively systemic, from big-room commercial DJs to 'underground' scenes.For this reason, seeing DISCWOMAN touch down in Toronto on Saturday October 25th was a blessing that our city was much in need of.
The NY-based female DJ collective has been turning heads in the past year, playing alongside Detroit legend K-Hand and doing international gigs everywhere from San Juan to Puerto Rico. Helmed by co-founder Frankie Decaiza Hutchinson, their mission is simple: showcase the wealth of female-identified DJ talent in the electronic music community.
DISCWOMAN's presence in Toronto was facilitated by a new up and coming group of promoters, the Work In Progress crew. Made up of Cindy Li (whose radio show on TRP shines a spotlight on amazing, consistently under-looked female techno artists) and Nancy Chen (who, between Otto's Berlin Döner and Mansion parties, has been traceable to 70% of successful events in Toronto at this point).
"For me, representation, visibility and equality has been, even before specifically listening to techno, really important to me," Li tells me. "It seemed like a no-brainer - from the point that I started to book shows, this just made sense."
Held in Kensington's Round venue, the cozy but spacious dance floor quickly filled as CL (aka Cindy Li) warmed the room up with the dystopian, paranoid clang of tracks like Matrixxman's "Sermons". The energy of her set felt palpable, with the crowd already shouting out cheers of support during the breakdown of one of Li's tracks.
ORPHX's Christina Sealey followed, ratcheted up the energy with an set that felt it it was consistently scaling upwards, locking the crowd's diverse, fairly queer crowd into a hypnotic shuffle. Rrose's "Waterfall (Birth)" was a highlight, its layers of pulsing, undulating, noise crashing on people like waves.
Perhaps the highlight of the night was Volvox, who's recently become well-known for her monthly residency at New York's Bossa Nova Civic Club. Over the last few years, she's built a reputation as one of the city's most in-demand and versatile DJs, and her skills were out in full force as she banged out a relentless set of acidic house that kept all the integrity (and pure joy) of the early 90's.
Hearing the wailing diva moans of Leonardus' "Get Down" had the room erupting in a frenetic mess of limbs and wide grins.
Because ROUND agreed to keep the music playing until 4am, Brooklyn's UMFANG was able to take things into deeper territory, kicking off her set with the muted spiritual tones of Huerco S' "No Jack." Emma Olsen's extensive knowledge of dance music history came across in a set that felt like it touched on many a dusty, long-forgotten corner of the rave world.
Carrying the crowd to the early hours of the morning without the dancefloor ever waning in energy, people were still dancing when the venue turned all the lights on, half-dressed in coats, but unable to leave while Entro Senestre's "DOHC" rang out into the room.
Most impressively, this party was the first I've attended in a while that began to cement the idea of dance music as a community - an intentional space where people come together to share and celebrate beliefs.
While the techno community should feel a moderate amount of shame that booking women-led DJ collectives is still an exception to the norm, DISCWOMAN feels like a shift in consciousness, a catalyst for change. "I want women who to go out to see someone DJing in front of them that looks like them" Li states. "By doing a party like this, we want to perpetuate a change in the scene where there more woman taking charge and stepping up to the plate."
Photos by Philip Skoczkowski Photography. Find Brendan Arnott on Twitter.
by Brendan Arnott via blogTO
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