The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Super Bowl drafts Tiësto to play music for game

The DJ will spin tunes during player warmups and `featured breaks'

- By George Varga

Will the Super Bowl, the National Football League’s biggest game of the year, be improved with a big, heavily amplified beat to make the game go boom-chicka-boom, boomchicka-boom at regular intervals?

The answer will come Feb. 11 when DJ Tiësto, who has been hailed as “the godfather of EDM” — electronic dance music — performs as what the NFL is billing as the Super Bowl’s firstever in-game DJ.

The Dutch disc jockey, mixer and electronic music producer will do a set as the teams warm up on the field. He will also spin music — or, more precisely, push knobs on his audio mixing console — during what the NFL is describing as “featured breaks” during the game. He is not the first DJ to perform during the pregame warmups — others have done so at the past five Super Bowls — but will be the first to do so during the game itself.

“Each year, we look to elevate the in-stadium experience for our fans, and with our first Super Bowl in Las Vegas, it seems only fitting to embrace the legacy of iconic DJS in this city by having Tiësto bring his signature style to our biggest event,” said Tim Tubito, director of event presentati­on and content at the NFL.

“As one of the most influentia­l Dj/producers who helped define the culture of Las Vegas and electronic music around the world, Tiësto is the perfect artist to help us create an unforgetta­ble game day experience for our fans, players and viewers everywhere.”

It remains to be seen how Tiësto (real name: Tijs Michiel Verwest) fares with the Super Bowl audience at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas — and with the tens of millions of TV and online viewers tuning in for the game.

Once regarded as the king of trance music, an exceptiona­lly unsubtle genre, he subsequent­ly broadened his range to include electro-pop and house music.

“I’m excited to be a part of the Super Bowl LVIII!” Tiësto, 55, said in a statement. “And it’s even more incredible that it’s in my favorite place — Las Vegas. Thank you to the NFL for having me. I cannot wait to party with you all at the big game!”

Las Vegas and big sporting events are not new for Tiësto. He spun tunes at the opening ceremony of the 2004 Olympics in Athens and, in 2012, shared the title of “resident DJ” with Calvin Harris at the Sin City nightclub Hakkasan, which is at the MGM Grand.

Tiësto’s estimated $38 million income in 2016 made him that year’s second-highest-earning electronic music artist, according to Forbes magazine’s annual tally. He had topped it in 2012, even though he earned a comparativ­ely meager $12 million that year.

Will Tiësto collaborat­e with Usher, this year’s Super Bowl halftime performer, or pregame performers Reba Mcentire, Andra Day and Post Malone?

Only time will tell, but our bet is he won’t.

 ?? TIM P. WHITBY — GETTY IMAGES ?? Tiësto, shown during a gig in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in 2021, will be the first in-game DJ at the Super Bowl, which takes place Feb. 11 in Las Vegas.
TIM P. WHITBY — GETTY IMAGES Tiësto, shown during a gig in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in 2021, will be the first in-game DJ at the Super Bowl, which takes place Feb. 11 in Las Vegas.

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