Think
For Yourself Tour!
by Brent Crampton
Omaha, Ne - Garnering an ascribed "holistic"
type of tribal psychedelic party techno, internationally
renowned DJ, Woody McBride, will make his way to Omaha on
March 16 to perform a live PA set. McBride will spin at
Bar 415 (415 S. 13th. St.), with an opening set by Brent
Crampton. Music will be from 8 p.m. – 1 a.m., with
an $8 cover charge.
From France to Munster and Austria to America, Woody has
toured all over Europe, Asia, South and North America bringing
his "engaging, inspirational music vision," according
to his Web site, www.djesp.com. And while he is on the Think
For Yourself Tour, McBride will be making his way back to
Omaha.
Bypassing the record bag or CDR’s, McBride is opting
instead for a live PA performance. Bringing his vintage
synthesizer’s and drum machines, behind McBride’s
looping techno patterns, “There is a holistic message
of universal connectedness underscoring it all, but it takes
shape in the form of the classic death and rebirth model
where we must go through the darkness to find healthy and
resolved transformation,” McBride said in a Newcity
Chicago interview. “What's more, it often contains
an unapologetically primal sexuality, engendering a soulfully
human quality that transpires from more than the sum of
technical mastery or artistic vision,” wrote journalist,
Jim Walsh.
While McBride is among an international caliber of DJs,
it's his lifestyle that sets him apart from the rest. Taking
on the role of a techno shaman, McBride says, “My
vision and drive is to liberate people and help them flush
themselves out of the matrix-like gestation pods that teach
us to be consumers and human garbage cans.”
Always pushing the boundaries of culture and your eardrums,
his renowned "Wall of Bass," stands 20 feet high
and 150 wide, pumping out a million watts of pulsating sound.
Taking this sound system to select parties, McBride was
“throwing some of the first and by far most legendary
warehouse parties in Minneapolis in the early nineties,”
wrote Walsh. “He initiated untold numbers of virgin
ears into the realm of worldless techno.”
When McBride isn't performing in DJ booths, you can find
his influence in your local record store. With more than
a 150 releases and remixes, many of which are on his own
label – Communique, McBride has left a deep impact
in the world of dance music.