Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Kaskade to lead Hard Summer back into L.A.

The EDM fest will include Skrillex, 21 Savage, John Summit, Ludacris and more

- By Holly Alvarado halvarado@scng.com

To an outsider, it may seem like Los Angeles-based DJ and noted record producer Kaskade has done it all.

Recent milestones include opening and selling out SoFi Stadium in Inglewood in 2021. In December, he teamed with fellow DJ Deadmau5 for the Kx5 project at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum — the biggest ticketed global headliner dance event of 2022, according to Billboard.

This flurry of activity was “a wild yet enjoyable breeze,” as he described it during a recent interview. Though he's received numerous accolades, topped music charts and headlined major festivals around the world, he said there is one thing he still hasn't done.

Kaskade has never headlined Insomniac's Hard Summer Music Festival.

He'll be there this year, topping the bill on the first evening of the event, which is celebratin­g its 15th anniversar­y on Aug. 5-6. Hard Summer will take place in multiple venues and across several stages at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Exposition Park and BMO Stadium (formerly Banc of California Stadium) in downtown Los Angeles. Kaskade will also do a B2B set and split the decks with fellow DJ John Summit.

“If you can believe it, this is actually the first time I'm playing Hard Summer, which is crazy because I feel like I've played at every massive event in California that exists,” he said with a laugh.

“I've always looked at Hard as the `cool guy,' so I'm happy to be invited. They've always been super progressiv­e in who they booked, and it's the perfect platform for me to finally play a cool back-toback.”

The EDM fest is returning to Los Angeles for the first time since 2010 and will also serve as part of the L.A. Coliseum's centennial celebratio­n. Skrillex will do a B2B set with Four Tet to close out the event Aug. 6. Other performers include 21 Savage, Black Coffee, Oliver Tree, Dillon Francis, Jungle, Kayzo, Diplo B2B Blond:ish, Fat Joe, Two Feet, Ludacris, Deorro, Yellow Claw B2B Flosstrada­mus and more.

Kaskade is stoked to share his spotlight with Summit, a fellow Chicago native, and he said it's an opportunit­y to have a little more fun, mess around with the set and really interact with the crowd.

“Literally nothing has been planned or plotted out for this set yet,” he said. “It feels like we're winging it, but in the best way possible. (Summit) is coming over a week before the festival, so at that point, I think that's when we'll figure out what the hell we're doing, because we don't actually know. But we always figure it out. We know it has to be epic, so as long as we got that down, were in good shape.”

Though Kaskade, 52, and Summit, 28, have separate generation­s of audiences, there's a lot of crossover, and Kaskade said they share a love for the DIY Chicago house music scenes and for the electronic music that's allowed them both to connect with millions of fans. It was at Lollapaloo­za Chicago that

Los Angeles-based DJ Kaskade will headline the first day of the Hard Summer Music Festival in Los Angeles on Aug. 5. He'll be doing a B2B set alongside John Summit.

Summit was introduced to Kaskade's music, as his 2008 song “I Remember” erupted through the speakers during Deadmau5's set. That moment inspired Summit to start producing music at age 16. Kaskade found the young DJ online six years later, and that led to occasional meet-ups, exchanging music via text chains and an impromptu New Year's Eve B2B set at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco to ring in this year.

With Summit around, Kaskade said he feels like he's looking at a younger, more energetic version of himself.

“Well, let's see, I feel like John is me, but a long time ago,” he said. “When I found him, he was in the beginning stages of getting buzz and I was intrigued with what he was doing. He's just this new kid from Chicago and that was me once upon a time. He's on the same path that I took way back in the day and I just wanted to help

this dude out in any way possible. So, I've been about him for a while now, so it does feel full circle.”

For Kaskade, the L.A. Coliseum is starting to feel like a second home. Aside from the recordbrea­king show last year, he played evening sets at Insomniac's Electric Daisy Carnival at the venue in 2009 and 2010. His ties with Insomniac are strong, as he notes he's grown alongside the event company's founder and CEO, Pasquale Rotella, who has been instrument­al in the EDM festival circuit. He reminisced on when the two started out and had no clue what the future would hold, except the possibilit­y of birthing a new community.

“Before this EDM boom the world is experienci­ng now, we were just doing it for the love of it,” Kaskade said. “I've known Pasquale for over 25 years and we were in it before there was any money or fame, so it means a lot for those who have been around.

HARD SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL

We didn't do it to buy big houses or for the glamour; we did this because we love what we do. I have so much respect for Insomniac, they just keep continuing to push forward and every year they continue to up the energy and it blows my mind. It's like, what are they going to do next year? Have me on a floating stage? I'm not sure where the end is, but that's the cool part.”

As Kaskade gears up for his Hard Summer debut, he knows the stakes at hand, considerin­g how the community has flourished in recent years. Sure, he's played almost everywhere, but there's nothing like coming home to an Insomniac crowd, a community that gave him the wings to fly in the first place.

“I've played all over the world and traveled to pretty much everywhere and played almost every festival and I can say without a doubt this is the best community in this music around the globe, and Southern California is a part of that, so anytime I get to play here, it's a treat,” he said. “There's always some massive moment here in Los Angeles that I build my year around and I feel fortunate enough to say that.”

 ?? FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES ?? When: 2-11 p.m. Aug. 5-6 Where: L.A. Memorial Coliseum, Exposition Park and BMO Stadium. Figueroa Street and Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles Tickets: Two-day general admission tickets start at $229; VIP two-day tickets start at $409. Fans can also put down deposits on tickets starting at $19.95. For more informatio­n on the festival and tickets, go to hardsummer. com.
FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES When: 2-11 p.m. Aug. 5-6 Where: L.A. Memorial Coliseum, Exposition Park and BMO Stadium. Figueroa Street and Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles Tickets: Two-day general admission tickets start at $229; VIP two-day tickets start at $409. Fans can also put down deposits on tickets starting at $19.95. For more informatio­n on the festival and tickets, go to hardsummer. com.

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