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Is NYC ReggaeFest becoming STALE? VIDEO

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Manage episode 373926071 series 1340615
Content provided by paul perez and Paul V Perez. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by paul perez and Paul V Perez or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Reggaefest.

I've attended many Reggaefest parties, including a couple of Yacth Fetes and 2022's Blaze party by South Street Seaport.

Epic League and CJ Milan have taken this party on the road with stops in Washington DC, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Boston, and Toronto. I believe in this brand and can see a future where it goes to Latin America and Europe—potentially even a multi-day cruise.

My favorite thing about the party is the format. The party is called Reggaefest, and they mostly play Dancehall. There's also Soca, Afrobeats, a little Reggaeton, and Ampiano as of this year.

They played Hip-Hop in the early ReggaeFest days(a few years ago), but I prefer they don't. Many other parties call themselves Reggae this and Reggae that, but they play close to an hour of hip-hop—false advertising on their part.

I also love that there are hardly any performances. Great DJs and great music keep us dancing all night long.

Having attended this party for some time and spending my hard-earned money to do so, I have a couple of criticisms.

New York Reggaefest has gotten stale.

Their fabulous DJ lineup keeps the vibes going, but they play the same songs at each party. A playlist that changes very little.

Another criticism is the same venues all the time. Stage 48 is the main culprit.

As a fan, I'd like to see a guest DJ at the monthly parties and different changes of venues. Let's do one month in SOBs and one in Irving Plaza—a day party at Knockdown Center or the Elsewhere space in Brooklyn.

I wish the Reggaefest team continued success, but I haven't attended as many of their parties this year because of this stale feeling. I'd love to continue going, but please give me more variety.

Thoughts? Comments? Do so on the blog here. Rate, like, leave a review!

If you've enjoyed this episode, please support this podcast by doing any, all your shopping through my affiliate link:

AMAZON: http://amzn.to/2dRu3IM

or DONATE/TIP here https://bit.ly/2LD1mwy

SUBSCRIBE Everywhere HERE https://bit.ly/3tkjIbV

Let's keep in touch, sign up for the email list here https://bit.ly/42QhWBi

  continue reading

416 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 373926071 series 1340615
Content provided by paul perez and Paul V Perez. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by paul perez and Paul V Perez or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Reggaefest.

I've attended many Reggaefest parties, including a couple of Yacth Fetes and 2022's Blaze party by South Street Seaport.

Epic League and CJ Milan have taken this party on the road with stops in Washington DC, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Boston, and Toronto. I believe in this brand and can see a future where it goes to Latin America and Europe—potentially even a multi-day cruise.

My favorite thing about the party is the format. The party is called Reggaefest, and they mostly play Dancehall. There's also Soca, Afrobeats, a little Reggaeton, and Ampiano as of this year.

They played Hip-Hop in the early ReggaeFest days(a few years ago), but I prefer they don't. Many other parties call themselves Reggae this and Reggae that, but they play close to an hour of hip-hop—false advertising on their part.

I also love that there are hardly any performances. Great DJs and great music keep us dancing all night long.

Having attended this party for some time and spending my hard-earned money to do so, I have a couple of criticisms.

New York Reggaefest has gotten stale.

Their fabulous DJ lineup keeps the vibes going, but they play the same songs at each party. A playlist that changes very little.

Another criticism is the same venues all the time. Stage 48 is the main culprit.

As a fan, I'd like to see a guest DJ at the monthly parties and different changes of venues. Let's do one month in SOBs and one in Irving Plaza—a day party at Knockdown Center or the Elsewhere space in Brooklyn.

I wish the Reggaefest team continued success, but I haven't attended as many of their parties this year because of this stale feeling. I'd love to continue going, but please give me more variety.

Thoughts? Comments? Do so on the blog here. Rate, like, leave a review!

If you've enjoyed this episode, please support this podcast by doing any, all your shopping through my affiliate link:

AMAZON: http://amzn.to/2dRu3IM

or DONATE/TIP here https://bit.ly/2LD1mwy

SUBSCRIBE Everywhere HERE https://bit.ly/3tkjIbV

Let's keep in touch, sign up for the email list here https://bit.ly/42QhWBi

  continue reading

416 episodes

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