[DEN]12.21 Sub.Mission presents:TheEnd.of.the.world@Cervante
Posted: Thu Nov 01, 2012 10:07 pm

The countdown to the apocalypse is on.
We’re less than two months away from Dec. 21, 2012, the date that the ancient Mayan Long Count calendar allegedly marked as the end of an era that would reset the date to zero and signal the end of humanity.
But will it?
In January, we asked if you were aware that a Shift in human consciousness was occurring?
We did.
With our events in 2012- we had one goal- to move people- through SOUND, not hype.
Join us for the FINAL celebration of the 2012 year and quite possible the FINAL celebration of our lives!!!
We could only go out one way and that is at Cervantes with all of you!
On December 21st, Sub.mission and Cervantes Present:
THE END OF THE WORLD PARY
Featuring.... Madlib (dj set), Del The Funky Homosapien, Shigeto, Bukue One , Joe Nice, The Widdler and a Sub.mission Resident Tag Set
Madlib
http:// http://www.stonesthrow.com/madlib
https://www.facebook.com/madlib
From the unlikely beach town of Oxnard, 40 miles north of Los Angeles, the multi-dimensional Madlib quickly rose to prominence as one of the most interesting figures in late-’90s hip-hop. With his childhood buddies in the Lootpack, Madlib quickly made a name for himself as a rapper, producer, and DJ. In particular, his expansive style and deft touch for composition made him one of hip-hop’s most sought-after producers. An enthusiastic crate digger, with a deep reverence for jazz and soul, Madlib branched out into a number of ambitious, engaging solo projects.
While continuing on with a massive release schedule and work load, Madlib completed a remix/reinterpretation project for Blue Note, a collaboration with Jay Dee under the Jaylib alias, a collaboration with MF Doom, produced 1/2 of fellow Lootpack member Wildchild’s solo record and many other remix and producer tasks all in 2003.
With each year Madlib has continued to expand his abilities beyond the core hip hop that he is known for.
DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIAN
http://www.facebook.com/THE.SirDzl?fref=ts
Hailing from Oakland, California, Del and his crew, the Hieroglyphics came out as a markedly non-gansta response to a burgeoning West Coast scene. After being put on at the tender age of 17 by his cousin Ice Cube, Del released two records on Elektra, I Wish My Brother George Was Here (1991) and No Need For Alarm (1993). Despite record sales in the hundreds of thousands, he recorded a third album,
Future Development, which was never commercially released. Del parted with Elektra and started work on the Hieroglyphics family album, 3rd Eye Vision (Hiero Imperium, 1998). Hiero went on the road and toured incessantly in support of the album for much of 1998. Del also spent a good portion of his time drawing, practicing Japanese, and playing mass amounts of video games. Finally ready to unleash a new record on the world, Del comes with BOTH SIDES OF THE BRAIN. Seventeen tracks of pure Del. He says of his work on this album: I've had complete control.. At times, Del has felt restrained by the formulas in hip hop and the expectations fans place upon emcees who have had hits. .I wish that I had the same freedom that someone like Bjork has when she puts out an album... Apart from collaborations with PrincePaul, El-P (Company Flow), and help from a few of his Hiero co-horts (A-plus, Casual, Domino) Del handled the majority of production on this album. By staying true to himself, Del has earned legions of adoring fans. He may have said it best in his classic, ..Mistadobalina..when he declared, ..its all in the mind and the heart... Indeed.
JOE NICE
http://www.facebook.com/joenice?fref=ts
Joe Nice is a dubstep DJ from Baltimore, Maryland.[1] Nice founded New York's irregular Dub War club night, which has hosted performances by British dubstep artists such as Hatcha,[2] Youngsta,[2] Kode9,[3] Mala,[4] and Loefah.[4] He performs regularly in New York, London (including at scene pillar DMZ),[5][6] and elsewhere.[7] He first heard dubstep in 2002, at the Baltimore venue Starscape, and began playing it that same year.[7] He has been praised for his charisma[8] and stage presence.[9] In 2005 music journalist Martin Clark also praised him for his access to new dubplates (in contrast to other American dubstep DJs) and willingness to play tracks by lesser-known producers.[6] In 2007, Nice was selected as one of URB magazine's "Next 100".
Shigeto
https://soundcloud.com/shigeto
https://www.facebook.com/pages/SHIGETO/349930070025
Artists take on pseudonyms for a multitude of reasons, but in Zach Saginaw’s case, those reasons run deeper than most. Zach records under the name Shigeto. It’s his middle name; it’s also his grandfather’s name, a tribute to the Japanese branch of Zach’s family tree. Shigeto also means “to grow bigger”—appropriate, given Zach’s premature birth-weight of less than a pound. Today, Shigeto stands for Zach’s vividly beautiful electronic music. Beat-driven but given to richly textured sound design, rhythmically fractured but melodically sumptuous, Shigeto’s music is a bridge between the past and present, bringing the artist face to face with a creative legacy that spans decades.
The Widdler
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Widdl ... ts&fref=ts
Bukue One
Sub.mission residents Tag Set
http://www.subdotmission.com/crew
Tickets Available at: http://www.ticketfly.com/purchase/event ... medium=bks
Ticket Price: $20 early bird (50 tickets) / $25 adv / $30 dos